BIG SUR, Calif., July 4, 2008

Wind Keeps Calif. Fires Raging On 2 Fronts

While Fire Inches Towards Big Sur, Newer Blaze In Santa Barbara Cty. Doubles In Size Overnight

    • A plane drops fire retardant to slow the progress of the wildfires near Goleta, Calif., northwest of Santa Barbara.

      A plane drops fire retardant to slow the progress of the wildfires near Goleta, Calif., northwest of Santa Barbara.  (AP/Mike Eliason, S.B. News-Press)

    • Thick plumes of smoke rise from wildfires near Goleta, Calif., northwest of Santa Barbara.

      Thick plumes of smoke rise from wildfires near Goleta, Calif., northwest of Santa Barbara.  (AP/Mike Eliason, S.B. News-Press)

    • A firefighter walks along a large hill backfire on a wildfire burn in Big Sur, Calif., Friday, July 4, 2008. More then 770 square miles have been scorched by a proliferaiton of blazes across northern and central California since June 20, according to the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection.

      A firefighter walks along a large hill backfire on a wildfire burn in Big Sur, Calif., Friday, July 4, 2008. More then 770 square miles have been scorched by a proliferaiton of blazes across northern and central California since June 20, according to the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection.  (AP Photo/Tony Avelar)

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  • Video California Engulfed By Flames

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  • Interactive Wildfires

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(CBS/AP)  A pair of out-of-control wildfires roared along California's central coast Friday, chewing through opposite ends of a parched forest and threatening a total of more than 4,500 homes.

While flames from the stubborn fire in the northern flank of the Los Padres National Forest inched closer to Big Sur's historic vacation retreats, state emergency officials said hot winds had caused a newer blaze 200 miles south in Santa Barbara County to double in size overnight. That fire is now the first priority for California firefighters, reports CBS News correspondent Bill Whitaker.

Residents of more than 1,700 homes in and around the city of Goleta were ordered to evacuate, joining an equal number of people who were told to leave Big Sur days earlier.

Driven by wind gusts as high as 40 mph, the Santa Barbara County fire was so fierce early Friday that firefighters at one point took shelter in about 70 homes they were trying to defend, said Capt. Eli Iskow of the county fire department.

"Hundreds of firefighters were in place around hundreds of structures," Iskow said. "I think we saved every one of those structures in that area."

Wind was less of a problem in Big Sur, which remained eerily empty under a thick blanket of fog and smoke at the start of the long holiday weekend. No more properties were lost since Thursday, but the density of the parched terrain allowed the 13-day-old wildfire to keep advancing on the storied tourist town, where flames made their way toward the scenic Pacific Coast Highway and sent forest creatures running toward the Pacific Ocean for cover.

"It came down into the canyon last night. I couldn't sleep. It's still in there lurking about," said Kurt Mayer, who ignored the mandatory evacuation orders to douse his Big Sur Deli with fire-retardant gel.

Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger doubled the number of National Guard called up for fire training Friday, reports Whitaker. Four hundred troops should be ready to do battle next week. Schwarzenegger also discouraged residents from buying fireworks, which could spark other blazes. Some cities have already banned them over the holiday weekend.

Daniel Berlant, a spokesman for the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection, said weather forecasts calling for winds to kick up again in the afternoon had officials worried the outlook for both blazes was not going to improve anytime soon.

By Friday morning, the Big Sur was only 5 percent contained and had consumed more than 100 square miles and 20 homes, while the Goleta fire was 10 percent contained and had destroyed about a half-dozen outbuildings and more than 8 square miles.

An increase in humidity and reduced temperatures helped decrease fire activity overnight, and the humidity remains high.

Firefighters are still working on getting lines around the Big Sur fire, with their highest priority protecting the community itself.

Although fire jumped a line overnight on the south end, crews were able to get a handle on it.

Total burned acreage for the Big Sur blaze now stands at 65,393 (growing approximately 1,088 acres overnight). The fire is five percent contained

There are 1,642 fire personnel (local, state and federal) working on this fire.

A 35-mile stretch of Highway 1 is closed to the public.

The Los Padres blazes were two of 335 active wildfires burning in California, down from a peak of roughly 1,500 fires a few days ago, but they were commanding the greatest share of equipment and personnel because of their locations near populated areas, Berlant said.

"Any time we have structures threatened and lives at risk, it's a top priority," he said.

Of those 335 active fires, officials consider 27 to be "major" (threatening life and/or property).

Another fire generating concern is in the Sequoia National Forest east of Bakersfield, where a wind-driven blaze had burned 25 square miles, destroyed one home and threatened 1,000 more in nearby communities.

In Arizona, officials said a blaze southeast of Prescott had burned four homes since it broke out June 28. The blaze has forced the evacuation of the mountain town of Crown King and was just 10 percent contained Friday.



© MMVIII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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by lloydbest1 July 5, 2008 11:52 AM EDT
"...excruciatingly hard back bereaking.." Posted by LloydBest1 at 08:49 AM : Jul 05, 2008

"...excruciatingly hard back breaking..". Dang! when am I ever going to learn to spell???
Reply to this comment
by lloydbest1 July 5, 2008 11:49 AM EDT
A long time ago I spent a year as a logger/commercial thinner. During that time my crew and I had a contract to thin some acreage near Truckee (CA). While we were there, a nasty forest fire broke out turning our contract to ash. It wasn''t terribly big (4000acres?) but burned with a violence not seen since Peshtigo. The forest service then reserved the right to impress timber workers onto the firelines when necessary. We were called to duty.
The next seven days was a blur of chopping trails, hauling dead brush, soaking live embers, digging ditches and bulldozing fire breaks. If my body hadn''t already been hardened by nearly nine months of the hardest work I have ever done in my life, I would have died. We humped b%tt in high gear from the time we got up until we collapsed at the end of the day - sometimes 18 hours later. We got few or no breaks because this fire didn''t give us any...I can not imagine a Roman galley slave or a Marine Corps recruit ever working as hard as we did that week.
I mention all of this not so much to pat myself on the back (oh, all right, maybe a little bit) but to point out the often unmentioned fact that these volunteers, in addition to putting their lives on the line, also do the kind of excruciatingly hard back bereaking, mind numbing, body trashing labor free men and women seldom, if ever do. For that these heros deserve an extra layer of thanks.
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by naucoming4u July 4, 2008 10:55 PM EDT
Firefighting... one of the most noble jobs and one of the most taken-for-granted services Americans have ever had given to them. Especially when they are volunteer fire fighters! Regardless whether they are paid or not, I am thankful for these brave Americans for doing what they do.
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by sgtrds-e4 July 4, 2008 8:57 PM EDT
All my sympathy to the family and friends of the volunteer firefighter. The country town I was raised in had an all volunteer fire department and we could not have been more proud of them.
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by maxlovesmax July 4, 2008 8:36 PM EDT
I live in the fires right now. I''ve worked cutting line and at wild fires when I was young. When are we going to realize that the CA fire department makes 10''s of millions of dollars letting it jump the line. Overtime is how fire fighters retire! Everyone who works there knows what''s going on. Cross the boarder into Oregon and it''s pristine.
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by barbaraf4 July 4, 2008 8:16 PM EDT
Our hearts go out to the Volunteer Firefighter who died on the line. I''m married to a Volunteer Firefighter. These men and women don''t have to be in harms way. They are there to make sure you and your property are okay.

Our prayers go out for the safety of all the Firefighters.
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