Wildfire Still Burns, More Mud Slides
California Weather Offers Woe And, In The Mountains Outside L.A., Snow
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Eric Limones of the South Santa Clara Fire District fights a wildfire as it approaches a home in the Santa Cruz Mountains west of Gilroy, Calif., Friday, May 23, 2008. Calmer winds and heavy fog brought some much-needed relief Friday morning to firefighters working to rein in a wildfire that quickly consumed a dozen buildings in the Santa Cruz Mountains a day earlier. (AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez)
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Capt. Jason Falarski of the Santa County Fire Dept. walks through the smoke created by the Summit fire in the Santa Cruz Mountains west of Gilroy, Calif., May 23, 2008. (AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez)
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Calif. Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger is given a briefing on the fire by Cal Fire chief and fire incident commander Joe Waterman, left, of Lassen, Calif., at a fire command post in Gilroy, Calif., Friday, May 23, 2008. A wind-whipped wildfire burning out of control burned several homes in the Santa Cruz Mountains on Thursday. (AP Photo/Paul Sakuma)
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Chris "Catman" Puett comforts his dog Tony after a wildfire burned up the property where Puett works as a caretaker in the Santa Cruz Mountains west of Gilroy, Calif., Friday, May 23, 2008. Puett had a shelter for abused animals on the property and lost 17 cats and four dogs to the Summit fire. (AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez)
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Photo Essay Central Calif. Wildfires Heavy brush and timber and gusting winds fuel blaze.
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Interactive Wildfires Photo essays, the worst U.S. fires, facts on fire science and health issues.
The fire has chewed through acres of centuries-old redwoods, destroyed at least 17 homes and displaced hundreds of people.
Calmer winds and off-shore moist air Friday morning helped firefighters battle the blaze which had forced hundreds of residents out of their homes, reports CBS News correspondent Sandra Hughes.
But as the marine layer lifted and the gusts picked up by afternoon, crews found themselves struggling to maintain the fire lines.
Almost 2,000 residents remained under evacuation orders - more than 450 of them mandatory - while almost 2,700 firefighters and a swarm of tanker planes and helicopters continued dousing the area, said Dave Shew, a battalion chief with the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection.
Shew said the cost of battling the blaze has risen to about $1.7 million and he expects the containment effort to continue through the weekend. "It's going to take a little time to build 9 miles of line with manual labor," Shew said.
Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger visited the Santa Cruz Mountains Friday to assess the damage and declared a state of emergency in Santa Cruz County to allow access to funds for the effort.
Schwarzenegger warned against failing to act quickly enough - a lesson learned from last year's wildfires.
"Move quickly, this is what we always say," he said. "Don't procrastinate, and don't worry about over-preparing or over-reacting. This is people's lives we're dealing with."
Fire officials said they had contained about 25 percent of the blaze, which so far has burned about 5 square miles and destroyed 28 structures. Another 500 buildings were threatened.
Meanwhile, the blaze left a trail of devastation. An unscathed bush of red roses was all that was left on the lot of one burned house with a sign in front that read "Spoiled dogs live here."
The home overlooking Monterey Bay was surrounded by a charred landscape where power lines lay melted across skeletons of bushes and trees. The ground was covered with scorched vineyards and black earth, an occasional puff of smoke rising from it.
Don't procrastinate, and don't worry about over-preparing or over-reacting. This is people's lives we're dealing with.
Gov. Arnold SchwarzeneggerThe cause remained under investigation.
Kathy Adams and Kenneth Rich hadn't even gotten a chance to return to their property before learning from news photographers who had taken pictures of their home that their house, built by
Adams' father, was lost. The couple had gathered Friday afternoon at a market in Corralitos with other evacuees, exchanging news about their homes and neighbors.
"I feel a great sadness in my heart for everybody who is Involved in this event," Rich said. "It's devastating."
Meanwhile, the cold, wet weather that's helping the firefighters in northern California is creating some almost unheard-of late-spring events in southern California - like snow!
In the town of Wrightwood, in the mountains just outside Los Angeles, a white cover made it a Memorial Day weekend to remember.
The wet weather has caused problems in last fall's fire burned hillsides. Mudslides closed roads and tore through homes.
In Sierra Madre, just northeast of Los Angeles, dirty brown water and sludge washed onto the roads in a densely populated canyon below foothills that were burned bare by a wildfire about a month ago.
Two roads were closed after a pre-dawn landslide of mud and debris. A skiploader was brought in to clear the area as road crews standing in foot-deep muck wielded shovels.
Residents were urged to leave Thursday night when thunderstorms pounded the hillsides but few did, said James Carlson of the city's emergency operations center.
Resident Mary Dotson said she was exhausted after sleeping less than three hours while worrying about the hillside.
She said neighbors in the close-knit community had been planning a weekend party to celebrate the completion of a neighbor's pool.
"It's filled with mud," Dotson said.
No homes were in immediate danger Friday, but a voluntary evacuation remained in effect and residents were offered sandbags to protect their homes, Carlson said.
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- Big Bear has had snow for several hours each day for the past several days, but that''s about par for winter''s wind-up in ski resort country. The water skiers on the lake, however, have been trying to qualify for "The Polar Bear Club".
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