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Fire approaches the edges of Wrightwood as residents flee [Updated]

Lanowsheep2

A brush fire that erupted Saturday in the Lytle Creek area of the San Gabriel Mountains continued to burn out of control this morning after destroying three structures, charring 3,500 acres of chaparral and timber and triggering the first mandatory evacuation in memory in the community of Wrightwood. 

[Updated at 10:34 a.m.: The fire, pushed by northwesterly winds of up to 40 mph, was burning within just  half a mile of the eastern edge of Wrightwood, a community of 3,400 residents. Fire officials were hoping to make a stand southeast of the town to prevent the flames from moving into Wrightwood proper, with both crews on the ground and air support.

“Our goal is to stop it right here,” said San Bernardino County Fire Department Battalion Chief Rick McClintock. “We’re hoping it will slow down when it slops over this saddle.”

As he spoke, helicopters doused nearby homes with water and engine crews added fire retardant gel to some structures in hopes of protecting them if the flames advanced farther. Elsewhere, bulldozers were climbing steep mountainsides to carve out firebreaks. McClintock said there are about 1,000 homes in Wrightwood, but another concern was about 150 homes and ranches near the intersection of Routes 2 and 138.

Meanwhile, the winds diminished and animals were also evacuating as wood rats were frightened out of the brush by the thick smoke.]

Many had already heeded mandatory evacuation orders.

Residents in mandatory evacuation zones had packed their belongings, with some heading down the mountain while others filled their gas tanks at the only gas station in town. A few purchased snapshot cameras to photograph their belongings for insurance purposes. 

The local hardware store sold socks and hats to firefighters and tire-repair kits to customers as they prepared to evacuate. Others gathered at a communal bulletin board in the parking lot of the hardware store and shared information while keeping a wary eye on U.S. flags that hung outside restaurants and shops to gauge wind direction and strength.

Some grumbled that the nearest evacuation shelter was in Rialto, some 45 miles away. Another shelter, which also was accepting large animals, was set up at the Victorville fairgrounds.

Among the evacuees was Hazel Kardyak, 72, who after filling her gas tank started up her engine and muttered, “Ya know, I don’t know where I’m going.

"I’ve lived here 47 years. This is the first mandatory evacuation we’ve ever had," Kardyak said. " It’s scary. It’s just me, my toy poodle and cat. I guess we’ll just head down mountain and make a few calls.”

Over at the Village Grind, a local coffeehouse, owner Greg Fleming was giving out free coffee to neighbors, many of whom came in with the same question: “What’s the latest?”

“We’ve been hit by flooding, water shortages, power outages, fires, and once we had so much snow we didn’t get mail for three days around Christmas time,” Fleming said, staring out the window toward billowing smoke in the east. “Now we have wind whipping a fire all over the place and evacuation orders.”

Helicopters and air tankers had begun attacking the fire at dawn, dousing flames on ridgelines and canyons with water and retardant as hand crews and bulldozers cut fire lines east of town. Firefighting personnel had doubled overnight, officials said, increasing from 500 to roughly 1,000.

On Sunday morning, much of the concern was focused on Lone Pine Canyon Road on the eastern edge of town, where dozens of homes were threatened.

“The fire is headed in this direction,” said San Bernardino County Fire Department spokesman Maurice Moore. “We’re not saying it will reach Wrightwood homes. We do plan on stopping it.”

The blaze began about 2 p.m Saturday in the Lytle Creek area east of Mt. Baldy and west of the Cajon Pass. It spread rapidly northward, threatening ranches and truck farms, among other properties, said John Miller, a spokesman for the U.S. Forest Service.

More than 500 firefighters from the Forest Service and San Bernardino were deployed in an uphill effort to contain the flames. By this morning, the fire was only 10% contained. The cause is unknown.

-- Louis Sahagun in Wrightwood

Photo: Smoke billows as the Sheep fire marches close to homes on the eastern edge of Wrightwood. Credit: Irfan Khan / Los Angeles Times

Map600

Interactive map: San Bernardino County Sheep fire

Pano600

Photos: Fire in the San Gabriel Mountains
 
Comments () | Archives (11)

“We’ve been hit by flooding, water shortages, power outages, fires, and once we had so much snow we didn’t get mail for three days around Christmas time,” Fleming said, staring out the window toward billowing smoke in the east. “Now we have wind whipping a fire all over the place and evacuation orders.”

hmmm. Don't forget to add the "but we'll rebuild if we lose the place, we can't even think of living anywhere else".

That is a 'sheep fire?'

Review is good,
Dont be such a pansy. Do you mean that those who choose to live in any path of a fire should be responsible for the consequences?

If so, I would think in some cases that may be true but not most of them.

How about a map to accompany the story?

It is time to see who cleared the brush and grass away from there home and made it fire safe.

Any hint as to why it's called the 'Sheep' fire?

It started near Sheep Creek.

A distinct plume was visible from US15 when the fire started yesterday at 2:10PM...my Son was driving South about that time

I would like to know how long it took to get boots on the ground, since it was probably only 10-20 acres during the first hour of the fire.

The key to containment is getting there within maybe an hour at most....

Hopefully, they'll get this one under control....need some rain & snow!

Its highly suspected to be caused by arson. the hot dry weather and 45 mph winds just stoked it out of control. all the air support are currently drawing water from "lost lake" and the back roads in that area are closed off while those efforts continue. full containment isnt expected for a couple days.

Thanks, dadada! (Love your name, being very much into dada myself!)


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