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Groton Daily Independent
Sunday, Dec. 10, 2017 ~ Vol. 25 - No. 154 ~ 22 of 37
Even as re ghters made progress containing six major wild res from Santa Barbara to San Diego County and most evacuees were allowed to return home, predicted gusts of up to 50 mph (80 kph) through Sunday posed a threat of aring up existing blazes or spreading new ones. High re risk is expected to last into January and the governor and experts said climate change is making it a year-round threat.
Overall, the res have destroyed nearly 800 homes and other buildings, killed dozens of horses and forced more than 200,000 people to ee ames that have burned over 270 square miles (700 square kilometers) since Monday. One death, so far, a 70-year-old woman who crashed her car on an evacuation route, is attributed to the re in Santa Paula, a small city next to Ventura where the re began.
The Ventura blaze continued to burn into rugged mountains in the Los Padres National Forest near the little town of Ojai and toward a preserve established for endangered California condors. While many evacuation orders were lifted, new ones were established as the re grew.
Brown said he had witnessed the “vagaries of the wind” that had destroyed some houses and left others standing and expressed concern for those who lost everything.
“What can you say?” he asked. “When you lose your house and your belongings and people lose their animals, it is a horror and it’s a horror we want to minimize.”
Fire ghters were on high alert for dangerous re potential even before the rst blazes broke out. On Dec. 1, they began planning for extreme winds forecast in the week ahead.
Ken Pimlott, chief of the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection, said authorities were pre- pared for destruction on the level of 2003 and 2007 restorms in Southern California and possibly those in Northern California that killed 44 people and destroyed nearly 9,000 homes and other buildings in October.
By Monday, of cials had brought in re crews from the northern part of the state as reinforcements and marshaled engines, bulldozers and aircraft.
On Tuesday they brought in more helicopters from the National Guard and “every last plane we could nd in the nation,” said Thom Porter, southern chief of the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection.
The military provided C-130 planes for re ghting, said Mark Ghilarducci, director of the California Of- ce of Emergency Services. More than 290 re engines came from Montana, Utah, New Mexico, Idaho, Arizona, Oregon and Nevada.
But when ames met ferocious winds, crews were largely powerless to stop them. Even re-attacking aircraft were helpless while being grounded at times because of night, high winds or smoke.
As res burned in Ventura and Los Angeles counties, re ghters from other states were already in place north of San Diego on Thursday when a major re erupted and rapidly spread in the Fallbrook area, known for its avocado groves and horse stables in the rolling hills.
“We had many resources in the area very quickly on this incident, but unfortunately within several min- utes the re had gotten out of control and well-established, and necessitated massive evacuations,” said Steve Abbott, chief of the North County Fire Protection District.
The re swept through the San Luis Rey Training Facility, where it killed more than 40 elite thoroughbreds and destroyed more than 100 homes — most of them in the Rancho Monserate Country Club retirement community. Three people were burned trying to escape the re that continued to smolder Saturday.
Most of this week’s res were in places that burned in the past, including one in the ritzy Los Angeles neighborhood of Bel-Air that burned six homes and another in the city’s rugged foothills above the com- munity of Sylmar and in Santa Paula.
The re in Fallbrook was no exception. Ten years ago, during a deadly spate of Santa Ana wind-driven infernos, ames wiped out most of the more than 200 homes in the Valley Oaks Mobile Home Park.
Memories of that blaze were fresh as ames approached Thursday and sheriff’s deputies told residents to leave immediately.
By the time he got the order to go, Mateo Gonzalez had already helped his brother move out of his nearby place and packed all of his important belongings.
In the 2007 restorm, Gonzalez had almost no warning before his house was destroyed, only four months

