Wildfire threatens homes, orchards and US oil fields

LOS ANGELES--A fast-moving scrub fire threatened orchards, oil fields and homes while displacing thousands of residents in Southern California on Friday, even as diminishing winds helped fire crews tame a rash of wildfires elsewhere across the state.


  The latest in a spate of conflagrations that have kept California firefighters on the go for weeks roared to life on Thursday evening near the hilly farm community of Santa Paula, about 70 miles (112.65 km) northwest of Los Angeles.
  As the Maria fire spread to 8,700 acres (3,520 hectares) of dry brush and chaparral, firefighters scrambled to protect valuable citrus and avocado crops in harm's way, as well nearby oil industry infrastructure. The blaze also threatened high-voltage power lines in the vicinity, along with radio and  communications towers at the top of a large hill called South Mountain, where the flames originated, Ventura County fire officials said.
  By noon on Friday, the fire was threatening 2,300 homes and other structures, with about 8,000 people under evacuation orders, Sheriff Bill Ayub told a news conference. Dozens of schools were closed for the day.
  No injuries or structural damage were reported, but local media said some orchard trees had been burned. Jail personnel and more 750 inmates of a county lockup near the evacuation zone were "sheltering in place" for the time being, as flames did not pose an immediate threat to the facility, the sheriff said.
  The fire erupted just as fierce Santa Ana desert gusts had begun to subside after howling across much of Southern California for two days. But strong, erratic winds were expected to persist through Saturday in many mountainous and foothill areas, including the Santa Paula fire zone.
  Elsewhere, subsiding winds helped firefighters gain control of several fires in the region that had broken out earlier. Just 30 miles (48.28 km) to the east in Simi Valley, a blaze that raged to the edge of the hilltop Ronald Reagan Presidential Library on Wednesday was 60% contained on Friday, while containment on a separate fire that had threatened the Getty Center art museum and thousands of homes in west Los Angeles on Monday was listed at 66% contained.
  East of Los Angeles, the 200-acre (80-hectare) Hillside fire that burned several homes early on Thursday in the north end of San Bernardino was 70% contained by Friday.

The Daily Herald

Copyright © 2020 All copyrights on articles and/or content of The Caribbean Herald N.V. dba The Daily Herald are reserved.


Without permission of The Daily Herald no copyrighted content may be used by anyone.

Comodo SSL
mastercard.png
visa.png

Hosted by

SiteGround
© 2025 The Daily Herald. All Rights Reserved.