By Ruben Vives and Joseph Serna and Alexia Fernandez
The Los Angeles Times
LOS ANGELES — A fast-moving fire that has already destroyed 80 homes and scorched 8,000 acres is now bearing down on several other communities in eastern Kern County, according to authorities.
About 2,000 people have been evacuated as firefighters try to defend some 1,500 homes. About 300 firefighters are on scene now, and officials hope to eventually have 1,000, they said.
Authorities said they were overwhelmed by the fire, which pushed into rural communities Thursday evening so quickly that firefighters could not keep up with the inferno. They said years of drought combined with heat and strong winds created the devastating conditions.
The Erskine fire was burning off Erskine Creek Road just south of Highway 178, near Lake Isabella in Squirrel Valley. The blaze is “extremely dangerous, extremely volatile,” said Kern County Fire Capt. Tyler Townsend.
“I’ve never been in a wildland fire where I’ve seen so many homes burn,” said Townsend, who has been in the area for nearly a decade. “It’s one of the most devastating I’ve ever seen.”
Flames shoot skyward as #ErskineFire rages by Lake Isabella in Kern County https://t.co/8zoR7Rp0sUhttps://t.co/nPwIPhKbn6
— ABC7 Eyewitness News (@ABC7) June 24, 2016
The blaze raced across 11 miles in 13 hours while firefighters raced to try to protect rural neighborhoods.
“Firefighters from all agencies … have been engaged in a firefight of epic proportions trying to save every structure possible,” said Kern County Fire Chief Brian Marshall at a news conference Friday morning. “In a situation like this there’s not enough fire trucks and firefighters to put in front of every structure … they’re working whole neighborhoods.”
Marshall estimated that at least 100 structures -- including 80 homes -- have been destroyed by the fire, but he said an accurate count wouldn’t be available until after sunrise.
The wind-pushed fire was uncontained and chewing through dead grass and big trees parched by years of drought. Hundreds of firefighters were flooding the area Friday morning to join in the effort, officials said.
The fire is threatening the small communities of South Fork, Weldon, Onyx, Lakeland Estates, Yankee Canyon and Mountain Mesa.
“Extremely dangerous, extremely volatile” fire in Kern County grows to over 19,000 acres https://t.co/wrh0iiFVKy pic.twitter.com/Q7Q5KAc8YB
— Los Angeles Times (@latimes) June 24, 2016
About 300 firefighters were available to fight the flames Thursday night, but that number was expected to double Friday, Townsend said. Three firefighters have suffered smoke inhalation, officials said.
Video from local TV stations showed the fire moving rapidly down a hillside and into a neighborhood of homes. Another video from the Kern County Fire Department showed some structures engulfed in flames as a large air tanker flew over the blaze.
An evacuation center had been set up at the Kernville Elementary School Thursday night. On Friday morning, evacuee Cher Buys, 63, said she had arrived there to find people “crying their guts out.”
The Weldon resident said she was at home in bed, when the electricity went out around 7 p.m. the night before. She said she walked outside and into a fog of smoke.
“You couldn’t see the neighbor’s house next door.”
? FEATURED POST ?
@kern_county_fire - #KCFD crews continue to assist at the #BorderFire.… https://t.co/oT5zzyS8Vv pic.twitter.com/CrwM3iNUGp— chief_miller (@chief_miller) June 23, 2016
After grabbing a few items from her home, she jumped into her black Jeep and drove off just as firefighters were arriving to evacuate people. She could also see tall flames being driven closer by the wind.
“It just kept climbing and climbing over the mountains,” she said of the fire. “For it to move through five towns is a lot.”
Buys said she had long feared that California’s drought and high temperatures would lead to a wildfire in this region.
“The trees aren’t getting water,” she said. “They’re dying.”
Conditions were the worst they could have been for a fire, said Geri Jackson, a spokeswoman with the Sequoia National Forest, one of several agencies responding to the blaze. Temperatures were in the high 90s, humidity was in the single digits and low teens, and the area was just coming off a weeklong wind advisory.
“The wind, the heat and the low humidity -- all that does is just drive a fire,” Jackson said. “When the fire initially started, it took off quickly.”
AT&T cell service was also out, making it difficult for residents to communicate with loved ones and officials.
Frightening growth in the #ErskineFire overnight - up to 8,000 acres burned now. Photo Kern County Fire Department pic.twitter.com/yghvU5tyjh
— Ginger Zee (@Ginger_Zee) June 24, 2016
In addition to Kernville Elementary School, evacuation centers had also been established at Lake Isabella’s Senior Center at 6405 Lake Isabella Blvd., and at Kern Valley High School at 3340 Erskine Creek Road. A local television station reported long lines of people at the high school, waiting to use a land line to make a phone call.
Kernville Elementary School, “Home of the Mountaineers,” was home to more than 100 people who were evacuated.
At about 8 am, Anthony Romero, a spokesman for Kern County Fire Department gave the first fire briefing to evacuees at the elementary school.
When Romero told them 80 to 100 homes were lost there was a mixture of gasps and small whispering comments between people.
The Kern County blaze is the latest of several major brush fires to hit Southern and Central California in the last two weeks.
In Santa Barbara County, the Sherpa fire forced hundreds to flee their homes north of Santa Barbara last week. This week, two fires in the hills above Azusa and Duarte forced more evacuations.
In San Diego County, firefighters increased containment Thursday of the Border fire just north of the U.S.-Mexico border that prompted mandatory evacuations for the entire east county community of Potrero. The Border fire has burned 7,483 acres and destroyed five homes, according to the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection.
The cause of the fire is under investigation.
Temperatures in the Los Angeles, Ventura and Santa Barbara county mountains and valleys hovered in the 90s Thursday, but they could climb into the 100s by the weekend while coinciding with a drop in humidity and strong winds, National Weather Service meteorologist Todd Hall said.
Assisting the @kerncountyfire with a wildfire off Erskine Creek Rd in Lake Isabella (Kern County). #ErskineFire pic.twitter.com/FIokwzglrA
— CAL FIRE (@CAL_FIRE) June 24, 2016
A red-flag warning -- meaning weather conditions are prime for a fast-moving, destructive wildfire -- was in effect for the those three counties, while a heat advisory was expected in Orange, San Diego and Riverside counties, the weather service said.
Weather conditions will get worse through the weekend, Hall said.
Copyright 2016 the Los Angeles Times