California coastline wildfire rages a week later
By TERENCE CHEA and JANIE HAR, Associated Press
Jul 29, 2016 11:05 AM CDT
A chimney stands where a home was burned by a fire at Palo Colorado Canyon in Big Sur, Calif., Thursday, July 28, 2016. Firefighters struggled Thursday to get the upper hand on a massive wildfire burning along California's picturesque Big Sur coastline, where anxious residents driven from their homes...   (Associated Press)

BIG SUR, Calif. (AP) — A wildfire burning along California's Big Sur coastline continues to rage on a week after it broke out, and looks to be a problem for the scenic region for weeks to come.

Hundreds of anxious residents driven from their homes awaited word on their properties and popular parks and trails closed at the height of tourist season because of the blaze, one of several large fires burning across western states. The California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection said the fire has now spanned 48 square miles (124 square kilometers) and is 15 percent contained.

It has destroyed at least 41 homes and put at least 2,000 homes and other buildings at risk. The massive blaze has forced at least 350 residents to flee.

The California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection estimated it will take until the end of August to extinguish it.

A 35-year-old father of two girls was killed this week when the bulldozer he was operating rolled over on the fire lines.

He was identified as Robert Reagan, a 35-year-old father of two daughters from Fresno County who also helps care for a young niece, according to his sister Hannah Cunnings.

Firefighters worked in rugged terrain near State Highway 1 in an area that draws tourists from around the world for the dramatic vistas of ocean and mountains. The famous roadway remained open, but smoke and the threat of flames forced the closure of state parks near Big Sur, a big economic driver for the region.

Tom and Donna Huntington, both 65, have lived for 29 years in the community of Palo Colorado, which was hard-hit by the fire. They fled their home last Friday and have been staying with friends and a Red Cross shelter at a school.

"It's a heartbreaker. I could cry right now," Tom Huntington said. "I'm so lucky I didn't lose my house. And I know some people that have."

Four people who escaped the fire early in the week acknowledged growing marijuana in the area for the last three months, Monterey County sheriff's Sgt. Kathy Palazzolo said.

Another man was killed last week in a wildfire still burning on the outskirts of Los Angeles.

Crews have stopped the spread of that 61-square-mile (157-square kilometer) blaze, which destroyed 18 homes in mountains and canyons around Santa Clarita.

The fire command says the blaze is 85 percent contained Friday, eight days after it broke out in a semi-rural area of suburban Santa Clarita and spread into the mountainous Angeles National Forest.

Authorities have not determined a cause for either California fire.

In Idaho, a wildfire burning timber in rugged terrain crossed a state highway and threatened a backcountry yurt system popular among winter recreationists. The 20-square-mile blaze burning west to east crossed State Highway 21 about 5 miles south of Lowman, officials said.

There are six yurts with a replacement cost of $60,000 each that are booked solid through the winter by cross country skiers, parks officials said.

In Wyoming, favorable weather conditions allowed firefighters to take the offensive Thursday for the first time against a large wildfire threatening seasonal homes in the west of the state. The fire in the Shoshone National Forest northwest of Dubois has burned about 19 square miles.

It has burned up to a rural subdivision area with about 290 seasons homes, but no structures have been lost.

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