By Christina Almeida
The Associated Press
PIONEERTOWN, Calif. — Rex Davis dug through the remains of his desert getaway Thursday, knowing his 1926 Buick, new Mercedes SLR convertible, childhood stamp collection and large collection of old jukeboxes were all lost. He was just hoping to find a bowl he had filled with hundreds of quarters.
And his fireproof safe? It saved his mother’s wedding ring. Everything else was ashes.
“It’s just devastating,” said Davis, 55, who added that his insurance will help him rebuild. “The safe? What a joke.”
That was hardly the only irony delivered by a 40,000-acre fire that has destroyed 100 homes and buildings and was threatening to combine with a smaller blaze Thursday.
Just a few yards down Mountain View Lane, the home of Davis’ brother was spared.
“It’s nuts. It jumps from one place to the next,” said John Davis, 53. “It goes to one house and skips another.”
The huge fire edged northwest toward the San Bernardino National Forest, burning greasewood, Joshua trees, pinon pines and brush on the desert floor. Containment was just 20 percent. Five miles away, a 1,200-acre fire in the forest and was 5 percent surrounded.
Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger declared a state of emergency in San Bernardino County to better coordinate and expedite state efforts to help people affected.
Evacuation orders were lifted for several communities, including the old Western film locale of Pioneertown, but new evacuations were ordered for dozens of homes in Morongo Valley, and residents of Burns Canyon and Rimrock remained unable to return home.
“We’re very, very lucky,” said Sandy Dugan, whose Pioneertown home stood while the charred remains of others smoldered. “It’s hard to see your neighbors’ homes gone.”
Authorities said smoke from the blazes 100 miles east of Los Angeles was smelled in Las Vegas and Ogden, Utah.
State fire officials said that both fires could link up on the desert floor. Higher up in the mountains, millions of dead trees carried the potential for even more destruction, but they were at least 15 miles from either fire.
Kevin Olson, deputy chief of operations in the headquarters of the California Department of Forestry, said it was possible “but not very likely at this time” that the fires would reach the timber stands.
Swaths of Southern California forests have been weakened by drought and killed by bark beetles. For several years, workers have been cutting down dead trees near communities and roads. Thousands of acres have been cleared but experts say it will take up to 20 years to remove all the deadwood.
However, Olson said there have been contingency plans for several years on how to fight fires and evacuate people in the beetle-infested areas.
The larger fire was ignited by lightning during the weekend and roared into an inferno Tuesday, racing through tiny high desert communities. Forty-two houses, 55 other buildings and 91 vehicles were destroyed in Pioneertown and other communities near Yucca Valley.
About 1,350 firefighters worked the blaze with the help of bulldozers, helicopters and air tankers. Nine firefighters and two civilians have been treated for minor burns or smoke inhalation.
Pioneertown, established in the 1940s as a location for filming cowboy movies, lost none of its Western-style storefronts.
The two fires were each about 30 miles from Big Bear, one of several communities atop the San Bernardino Mountains that were evacuated when wildfires swept Southern California in 2003.
Those 15 fires were collectively the most devastating in recent state history, killing 22 people, destroying 3,640 homes and blackening 750,000 acres.
Robert Vinson, 51, brought his wife and two sons to the Big Bear Lakefront Lodge on Tuesday for a vacation to escape the 105-degree heat in his Riverside County town of Menifee. He planned to stay until Saturday unless things got hotter.
“When I see the flames from my hotel room and they get within 10 miles, I’m leaving. I’m not gonna wait until they’re under my balcony,” he said.
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Associated Press Writer Laura Kurtzman in Sacramento, Calif. contributed to this report.
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On the Net:
National Interagency Fire Center: http://www.nifc.gov
Pioneertown: http://www.pioneertown.com