Firefighters battle Southern California wildfire

Higher humidity and cooler temperatures help as fire is ‘30 per cent contained’

A firefighter uses a hose line to extinguish fire from a tree. A fierce, wind-driven wildfire spread yesterday along the California coast northwest of Los Angeles, threatening 4,000 homes and a military base as residents were evacuated ahead of the flames and a university campus was closed. Photograph: Patrick T Fallon/Reuters
A firefighter uses a hose line to extinguish fire from a tree. A fierce, wind-driven wildfire spread yesterday along the California coast northwest of Los Angeles, threatening 4,000 homes and a military base as residents were evacuated ahead of the flames and a university campus was closed. Photograph: Patrick T Fallon/Reuters

A fierce wildfire threatening 4,000 homes northwest of Los Angeles was about 30 per cent contained today as higher humidity and cooler temperatures helped firefighters, fire department spokesmen said.

The fire in coastal Ventura County has blackened about 28,000 acres of rugged brush land since starting on Thursday. There is no forecast for containment and the fire was not expected to be under control until May 13th, Ventura County Fire Department spokesman Tom Kruschke said.

A drop from record-high temperatures yesterday and slowing, cooler winds off the Pacific Ocean were aiding the almost 1,000 firefighters brought in from across California, he said.

“We’re getting much more favorable weather conditions here. We don’t have the high winds and the high temperatures,”Mr Kruschke said.

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Light rain forecast for tomorrow and heavier precipitation expected for Monday and Tuesday also could help firefighters battling what authorities are calling the Springs Fire.

A second spokesman, Bill Nash, said firefighters were concentrating on the Newbury Park area, with the eastern end in mop-up phase.

About 4,000 homes have been threatened by the fire and 15 damaged. No injuries have been reported.

The Springs Fire and a flurry of smaller blazes around the state this week marked a sudden start to the California fire season. Some weather forecasters have predicted the season will be worsened by a summer of high temperatures and drought throughout much of the US West.

The fire forced the closure of California State University Channel Islands in Camarillo, where the high temperature was a record 96 degrees Fahrenheit (36 Celsius). It is tentatively scheduled to reopen tomorrow, the school said on its website.

The blaze has sent thick smoke drifting over the beach community of Malibu and farther inland across Los Angeles County.

The Point Mugu US Naval Air Station has lifted its order that all non-essential personnel stay home because of the fire. A base housing unit that is home to 118 families was evacuated yesterday because of heavy smoke, a base spokeswoman said.

Reuters