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Southern California wildfire destroys more than 100 structures

A Southern California wildfire has destroyed 132 structures, mostly homes, in less than two days, fire officials said Thursday as raging winds were forecast to ease.

Raging winds expected to ease Friday, but fire was just 5% contained heading into the day

A structure is burning and aglow in orange in a nighttime photo.
Flames consume a home as the Mountain Fire burns in Camarillo, Calif., on Wednesday. Officials have issued a red-flag alert for the area, which has been hit by wildfires more than once in the past six years. (Noah Berger/The Associated Press)

A Southern California wildfire has destroyed 132 structures, mostly homes, in less than two days, fire officials said Thursday as raging winds were forecast to ease.

The fire started Wednesday morning in Ventura County and has grown to about 83 square kilometres at five per cent containment. Its cause has not been determined.

Ten people have been injured in the course of the fire, Ventura County Sheriff James Fryhoff said. Most of them suffered from smoke inhalation or other non-life-threatening injuries.

A vintage sports car is pushed by firefighters in the foreground as a burning structure and palm trees are shown in the background.
Firefighters and sheriff's deputies push a vintage car away from a burning home as the Mountain Fire burns in Camarillo, Calif. Thousands were subject to an evacuation order. (Noah Berger/The Associated Press)

Fire officials said 88 other structures were damaged but did not specify whether they had been burned or affected by water or smoke damage.

Some 10,000 people remained under evacuation orders Thursday as the Mountain Fire continued to threaten some 3,500 structures in suburban neighbourhoods, ranches and agricultural areas around Camarillo in Ventura County.

County fire officials said crews working in steep terrain with support from water-dropping helicopters were focusing on protecting homes on hillsides along the fire's northeast edge near the city of Santa Paula, home to more than 30,000 people.

WATCH l Anxious times for residents:

Fierce wildfire near L.A. destroys homes, forces thousands to flee

19 days ago
Duration 1:53
Firefighters are battling a fierce wildfire fuelled by strong winds near Los Angeles. Thousands have fled and more than 130 structures have been destroyed, but firefighters could get a reprieve as winds ease.

Kelly Barton watched as firefighters sifted through the charred rubble of her parents' ranch home of 20 years in the hills of Camarillo with a view of the Pacific Ocean. The crews uncovered two safes and her parents' collection of vintage door knockers undamaged among the devastation.

"This was their forever retirement home," Barton said Thursday. "Now in their 70s, they have to start over."

Her father returned to the house an hour after leaving Wednesday to find it already destroyed. He was able to move four of their vintage cars to safety but two — including a Chevy Nova he'd had since he was 18 — burned to "toast," Barton said.

Charred vehicles are shown in the foreground on a debris-filled ground, as a burnt structure and smoke in the sky are shown.
Burned vehicles sit near a destroyed home in Camarillo, Calif., on Wednesday. The region's famous Santa Ana winds were hampering efforts to fight the blaze. (Ethan Swope/The Associated Press)

Officials in several Southern California counties urged residents to be on watch for fast-spreading blazes, power outages and downed trees amid the latest round of notorious Santa Ana winds.

Santa Anas are dry, warm and gusty northeast winds that blow from the interior of Southern California toward the coast and offshore, moving in the opposite direction of the normal onshore flow that carries moist air from the Pacific.

They typically occur during the fall months and continue through winter and into early spring.

Ariel Cohen, the U.S. National Weather Service's meteorologist in charge in Oxnard, said Santa Ana winds were subsiding in the lower elevations but remained gusty across the higher elevations Thursday evening.

A firefighter is in the foreground with his back to the camera, spraying a hose toward a structure with massive orange flames surrounding it.
A firefighter attempts to control the blaze burning a house in Camarillo, Calif., on Wednesday. (Etienne Laurent/AFP/Getty Images)

The red flag warnings, indicating conditions for high fire danger, expired in the area except for in the Santa Susana Mountains, Cohen said. The warnings will expire by 11 a.m. local time Friday in the mountains.

The Santa Ana winds are expected to return early-to-midweek next week, Cohen added.

The Mountain Fire was burning in a region that has seen some of California's most destructive fires over the years. The fire swiftly grew from about 1.2 square kilometres to more than 41 square kilometres in little more than five hours on Wednesday. By Thursday evening it was mapped at about 83 square kilometres and California Gov. Gavin Newsom had proclaimed a state of emergency in the county.

An burning and smoky residential property and structure are shown behind an iron fence, with a political sign saying 'Harris-Walz' lying on the ground in the foreground.
A damaged residential property in Camarillo, Calif., is shown on Wednesday. Preventative power outages were employed in some parts of the state this week due to the risk of electrical equipment sparking blazes. (Ethan Swope/The Associated Press)

The Ventura County Office of Education announced that more than a dozen school districts and campuses in the county were closed Thursday, and a few were expected to be closed Friday.

Utilities in California began powering down equipment during high winds and extreme fire danger after a series of massive and deadly wildfires in recent years were sparked by electrical lines and other infrastructure.

Power was shut off to nearly 70,000 customers in five counties over the heightened risk, Southern California Edison said Thursday. Gabriela Ornelas, a spokesperson for Edison, could not immediately answer whether power had been shut off in the area where the Mountain Fire was sparked.

The wildfires burned in the same areas of other recent destructive fires, including the 2018 Woolsey Fire, which killed three people and destroyed 1,600 homes near Los Angeles, and the 2017 Thomas Fire, which destroyed more than a thousand homes and other structures in Ventura and Santa Barbara counties. Southern California Edison has paid tens of millions of dollars to settle claims after its equipment was blamed for both blazes.

With files from CBC News