SAN FRANCISCO — Hundreds of Northern California homes and businesses were threatened Monday after wind-driven wildfires broke out over the weekend, forcing thousands of residents to flee their homes throughout rural regions north of San Francisco.
The biggest fires continued to grow but there were no reports of injuries or deaths, California’s Department of Forestry and Fire Protection said.
About 3,000 residents evacuated homes in Lake County, about 120 miles (193 kilometers) north of San Francisco. A wildfire there that was not contained at all grew to 13 square miles (21 square kilometers) and destroyed at least 22 homes and buildings, the agency reported.
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Fire Battalion Chief Jonathan Cox said more than 230 firefighters using helicopters, bulldozers and other equipment were battling the Lake County fire in a rugged area that made it difficult to get equipment close to the blaze.
“It’s kind of the worst possible combination,” Cox said.
The rural region was hit hard in 2015 by a 120-square-mile (310-square-kilometer) fire that killed four people and destroyed 2,000 buildings.
Terri Gonsalves, 55, evacuated her Lake County home around midnight Sunday, tossing four goats into her truck.
She had been monitoring another fire that appeared to be moving away, but then she looked out her back window and saw a big hill aflame.
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“Holy cow, it’s right here,” she said she thought. “I’m outta here.”
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She is staying with her daughter in nearby Middletown, a small city also devastated by the 2015 wildfire. She last heard that her house is safe.
“I think we’re all just so traumatized and overwhelmed with all these fires year after year, this whole community is at a breaking point,” she said, but added, “When this stuff happens, we rally around each other.”
She posted on Facebook that she needed to borrow a portable pen big enough for four goats that keep escaping her daughter’s yard. She expects a friendly neighbor to come through any minute.
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“I’m so done,” she said of living amid wildfires every couple of years. “I’m ready to move to a tropical island.”
Authorities also ordered residents to evacuate in Tehama County, about 200 miles (322 kilometers) north of San Francisco, where two wildfires were burning. One grew to 4 square miles (6 square kilometers) while the smaller one of about half a square mile destroyed multiple homes and businesses in the city of Red Bluff.
A Red Bluff police officer helping residents evacuate lost his home to the smaller wildfire, authorities said.
Red Bluff Police Lt. Matt Hansen said Corporal Ruben Murgia’s pregnant wife and three young children were ordered to evacuate their home while he was on duty Saturday when the fire started. The family escaped safely, but lost nearly all of their possessions, Hansen said.
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Hansen said about $10,000 in cash along with furniture and clothing has been donated to the family as they search for a rental home.
That fire was under control and nearly extinguished, Cal Fire reported.
Cal Fire said the larger fire was 20 percent contained. A nearby casino was serving as an animal evacuation center.
Residents also fled a wildfire in Shasta County about 300 miles (482 kilometers) north of San Francisco.
No cause has been determined for any of the fires.
Officials said hot weather, high winds and dry conditions are fueling the fires less than a year after California’s costliest fires killed 44 people and tore through the state’s wine country in October, causing an estimated $10 billion in damage.
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Downed power lines were blamed for 12 of the two dozen 2017 fires. The causes of the other fires are under investigation.
While the blazes were the first major ones of the season to hit California, others have raged throughout the west for weeks. Last week, a Colorado wildfire forced residents of more than 1,000 homes to evacuate and led to warnings for others to get ready to leave.
The fire 13 miles (43 kilometers) north of Durango was in the Four Corners Region where Colorado, Arizona, New Mexico and Utah meet — the epicenter of a large U.S. Southwest swath of exceptional drought, the worst category of drought.
Moderate to extreme drought conditions affect larger areas of those four states plus parts of Nevada, California, Oregon, Oklahoma and Texas, according to the U.S. Drought Monitor.
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