Heat Wave May Stoke Calif. Wildfires
High Pressure System Forecasted To Bring Higher Temperatures And Winds To Fire Ravaged West
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More Calif. Fires Forecasted
Firefighters are making progress against the massive wildfires that have torn across the state, but a forecast of high heat and dry winds has fire crews concerned. Dave Price reports.
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Wildfires Rage In California
Fire crews are fighting exhaustion as they battle more than 1,000 active wildfires across the state. Sandra Hughes reports.
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Golden State Ablaze With Fire
Over 900 people have been evacuated as wildfires continue to spread throughout California and into parts of neighboring Nevada. Sandra Hughes reports.
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Firefighters are surrounded by morning fog mixed with haze from a wildfire at an airstrip in Big Sur, Calif., Monday, July 7, 2008. Firefighters continue to fight the Basin Complex Fire in the Los Padres National Forest near Big Sur Monday, but the situation may get worse since temperatures are expected to rise. (AP PHOTO)
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Fires Char California
Stretched thin, firefighters forced to strategically choose which ones to battle.
The return of some residents to their homes Monday marked progress against the siege of wildfires, but forecasters warned that weather is turning the advantage back in favor of the flames.
"A high pressure system is setting up over the entire West," said Mike Smith, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Sacramento. "So in addition to the very warm temperatures we're getting, we'll also be getting a little bit of offshore wind over the next couple of days, which keeps the moist marine air from coming inland."
The turn toward hot and drier weather comes as three major forest blazes - a blaze above the city of Goleta west of Santa Barbara, another 150 miles to the northwest at Big Sur and a third fire in the southern Sierra Nevada - are all less than half contained.
Those fires, considered the most dangerous, were among more than 300 still uncontained from some 1,780 that have scorched more than 960 square miles of California in two weeks. Most were started by lightning strikes, but several are believed to have been human-caused.
Ground temperatures were surpassing 100 degrees, CBS News weatherman Dave Price reported from Goleta.
Some 100 structures statewide have been destroyed. One firefighter died of a heart attack.
The 15-square-mile fire near Goleta was 35 percent contained late Monday, mostly on its southern side near neighborhoods. More than 2,000 residents were able to return home.
"We recognize that the west end is problematic," Goleta Mayor Michael Bennett said. "But the north and the northeast corner will be contained soon and then we can maybe take a deep breath and relax."
Some mandatory evacuation orders and warnings to be ready to leave remained in effect for scattered homes on the fire's growing western flank on the Santa Ynez Mountains.
Roger Aceves, Goleta's mayor pro tem, said residents were immensely grateful to firefighters, who in some instances beat back flames from front doors. But they were still concerned that the fire could whip up again.
"We know what can happen," Aceves said. "This is brush that hasn't burned since 1955."
Five fresh "hot shot" crews from Arizona and New Mexico, totaling 100 firefighters, were brought in Monday to the region about 100 miles northwest of Los Angeles.
About 36,000 customers in Santa Barbara County lost power around 8 p.m., said Southern California Edison spokeswoman Nancy Williams. Nearly all had their power restored within an hour, she said. It was at least the sixth straight day that transmission lines have been affected by flames and smoke.
Officials for the 125-square-mile blaze near Big Sur and the 41-square-mile fire in the Sequoia National Forest east of Bakersfield said those blazes won't be controlled for at least another two weeks.
The fire near Big Sur, was 18 percent contained and raging through the remote Ventana Wilderness where difficult access made it hard to build containment lines, said Jim Turner, spokesman for the U.S. Forest Service.
A mandatory evacuation remained in effect Monday for all residents of Big Sur. Firefighters were struggling to widen fire lines near Highway 1 and residential areas to between 300 feet and a quarter mile, Turner said.
Crews secured a Boy Scout camp Monday by burning out brush between the buildings and the wildfire's edge and were setting controlled fires elsewhere to halt the blaze's march, the Forest Service said.
The fire in the southern Sierra Nevada was 26 percent encircled. Unexpected winds pushed it on several flanks Monday, causing flames to jump western containment lines and run up Brown Peak. Air tankers and helicopters dumped flame retardant.
"The steep, challenging terrain makes it tough to work directly," said Bob Kurilla, fire spokesman. "It will take a little while, but we're making progress."
© MMVIII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.


Global warming and bad land use practices have caused this to be so bad. Fires are natural (as is homosexuality); in fact redwoods cant reproduce WITHOUT fire. What''s NOT normal is to have 30 million people living in a fire- and earthquake-prone zone.
Cause and effect, dude. Many things have contributed to this fire; same-*** marriage is not on the list.
Grow up!
Maybe, if we wanted a healthier better America we should turn to God to heal our land? Just think? It happened another time in the annuals of history? Yeah God was going to destroy this place called Nineveh and the people repented and God spared them. We could do this in America?
Providence_6 said: "we should turn to God to heal our land? Just think? It happened another time in the annuals of history?...We could do this in America?"
*** it, middlecrank, you woke him up!!
have a nice day.
Cause and Effect are laws God has established to bring order to this world. That is funny that you mentioned that, antheist. The Pharoah of Eygpt said the same thing when Moses brought God''s judgment upon that nation. Hmmmmmmmmmm, lighting is pretty much God''s will, yeah. His physics and his world, atheist.
Such sentiments border on the sadistic. To tell someone who has lost their home and everthing in it that they do so because they fell into God''s disfavor is is mean spirited to say the best of it. Even if that someone DID sin. Somewhere the scriptures say that it rains on the just as well as the unjust (Matthew, maybe?). While that may be true, glorifying in the downpour is not the sort of thing the God I know would take kindly to and it would invalidate every reason He sent His own Son to die on the cross for the rest of us.
Back to the subject at hand...Tuesday''s temperatures are expected to range from about 100 to 105 in the interior parts of Big Sur to 110 or so in the Sierra foothills to 115 to 118 in the northern Sacremento Valley. Humidities could drop into single digits and the wind in Redding is already 25 MPH. Kind thoughts to everyone living in the affected areas.
I hate to sound lloyd, you don''t sound like much of a christian to me. I think you need to get out of the lukewarm water and into Jesus. God has already shown his deposition to perversion - 1st book of the Bible.
Oh, as to your statement about scriptures, well God is slow to anger. Guess he had enough.
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by john-rodger
July 11, 2008 5:16 AM EDT
- Being a resident of Santa Barbara which is just below Goleta I read these postings and wonder, has anyone ever seen the fury of a wildfire. How you pass judgement on the people of this state is beyond my comprehension. Like it or not, we are all in this together. Its a small planet when taken into relationship with the universe. We are our brothers keeper. Open your hearts and your minds, I believe He said something to the effect of ''love thy neighbor'' or as it says in ''Clay County Chronicles'' ''every once in awhile, bait the other fella''s hook.'' Yankees too? ''Yep, Yankees too''. bless all of ya and I hope you never have to witness the burning of a friends home.
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