In Pictures: Thousands Of Residents Urged To Flee As Wildfires Rage In California

Firefighters make a stand in the backyard of a home in Boulder Creek, California.

Tens-of-thousands of residents have been urged to flee their homes as hundreds of wildfires blaze out of control in northern and central California.

Six people have been killed as the fires – which doubled in size on Friday to become some of the largest in state history – spread across huge areas of land and threatened to consume small towns. 

The fires, which broke out over a period of days, have blackened an area larger than the US state of Rhode Island and destroyed more than 500 homes and other structures. In addition to the fatalities, 43 firefighters and civilians have been hurt.

Pam, who declined to give a last name, examines the remains of her partner's Vacaville, California. 

California governor Gavin Newsom said crews were fighting 560 fires across the state, many of them sparked by lightning storms, straining resources to the breaking point as he seeks reinforcements from as far away as Canada and Australia.

“We are not naive by any stretch about how deadly this moment is and why it is essential … that you heed evacuation orders and that you take them seriously,” Newsom, a Democrat, told Californians at a news briefing.

Firefighters watch flames from the LNU Lightning Complex fires approach a home in the Berryessa Estates neighbourhood of unincorporated Napa County, California.

The state has been hit by its worst dry-lightning storms in nearly two decades as close to 12,000 strikes have sent flames racing through lands left parched by a recent heat wave. Some 175,000 people have been told to leave their homes.

In Santa Cruz, a city of around 65,000 people on California’s central coast, residents were told to prepare “go bags” as bulldozers cut fire lines and flames came within a mile of the University of California Santa Cruz campus.

Volunteer firefighters for the Boulder Creek Fire District are joined by reinforcements from other California fire departments in Boulder Creek.

Video footage posted on social media showed giant Redwood trees, some more than 2,000 years old, standing largely unscathed among the torched ruins of buildings in and around Big Basin Redwoods State Park.

A complex of blazes east of Palo Alto and another in wine country south of Sacramento are the seventh and tenth largest wildfires in state history, respectively, according to CalFire, and the agency warned that more dry-lightning storms were expected as early as Sunday.

 With up to 20 separate blazes burning in some lightning fire complexes, firefighters and locals pleaded for more support.

A billy goat wanders under a charred tree after surviving a fire on Pleasants Valley Road in Vacaville, California.

“We’re still understaffed for a fire of this size,” said Daniel Potter, a CalFire spokesman, in reference to the Santa Cruz blaze where crews are working 72-hour shifts to save homes.

“We need HELP in the Santa Cruz mountains. SEND IN THE NATIONAL GUARD NOW!” San Jose State University professor Scott Myers-Lipton said on Twitter.

Firefighters protect a home in the Berryessa Estates neighborhood of unincorporated Napa County.

Four people died in the so-called LNU Complex fire in the North Bay area that has destroyed more than 480 homes and structures, including a winery as it burned over 219,000 acres in five counties. All evacuees were allowed to return to their homes in Vacaville on Friday.

 

Thomas Henney, left, and Charles Chavira watch a plume spread over Healdsburg, California.

A utility crewman died on Wednesday while on duty helping clear electrical hazards for first-responders at the same fire. Earlier that day, the pilot of a firefighting helicopter was killed in a crash in Fresno County.

“All our first responders are working to the ragged edge of everything they have,” state lawmaker Jim Wood said.

A firefighter rubs his head while watching the LNU Lightning Complex fires spread through the Berryessa Estates.

Plumes of smoke and ash fouled air quality for hundreds of miles around fire zones, adding to the misery and health risks of residents forced to flee or those stuck inside sweltering homes that lacked air conditioning.

Hank Hanson, 81, gestures to the kitchen of his home, destroyed by the LNU Lightning Complex fires, in Vacaville, California.

Medical experts warned that the coronavirus pandemic has considerably heightened the health hazards posed by smoky air and extreme heat, especially for older adults and those already suffering from respiratory illnesses.

A firefighter uses a hose on a burning house in Bonny Doon, California.