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The Chronicle’s chimney map and follow-up supply updates on chimneys burning California, adding massive lightning-related flames in Northern California:
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Today’s updates:
7:30 p. m. The place of the glass fireplace is now contained in 41%: some other day of progress in combat opposed to the place of the glass fireplace, Cal Fire reported that the containment of 41% of the chimney site stretched to 66,840 acres in Napa and Sonoma counties. At least 553 single-family homes have been destroyed and 21,785 structures are still threatened.
7:15 p. m. La August fireplace is approaching slightly: the large August fireplace, which spans seven counties in Northern California, highest across 1,000 acres more on Monday. It’s 1,003,387 acres. The western area, which includes parts of Mendocino, Humboldt and Lake counties, is now contained in 60%, Cal Fire reported in its night update.
6:45 p. m. Glass Fire “the precedence for the state,” Cal Fire’s boss says: with 2,774 fire fighters employing 408 fire trucks to fight the glass fire, “we are the precedence of the state here,” Cal Fire Division Chief Ben Nicholls said Monday. Sonoma County update on the sprawling lamp spot for the fireplace in two counties. And although the place for the fireplace lamp remained contained only by 30% on Monday morning, Nicholls said he was convinced that “we have turned the corner on the lamp for the lamp as a whole. “
6:30 pm. Zogg Fire is 80% Confined – The Zogg Fire has burned 56,305 acres in Shasta County and is 80% confined, according to a Cal Fire update Monday night. However, chimney officials warned that “fuels remain very receptive to ignition” due to heat and dry temperatures of more than two months. More than 1,700 first responders are fighting the fire, which has destroyed more than two hundred buildings.
5:00 pm. Air quality is deteriorating in parts of the Bay Area: After a dramatic improvement over the weekend, air quality deteriorated in parts of the Bay Area on Monday, while smoke was coming from the chimney glass building in North Bay. Smart air quality spaces were along the coast. In the central bay domain, the situations were moderate and, in the extreme east, unsanitary. The North Bay also had a moderate and unhealthy air aggregate. Read more.
2:46 p. m. The rain forecast is encouraging news, isn’t it?Expected rainy weather would likely affect firefighters in the short term, but it’s probably not far behind in the season to have a long-term impact.
12: Four 3 p. m. Newsom confirms that more than four million acres have burned in California in 2020: Gov. Gavin Newsom said Monday that the fact that wildfires burned more than four million acres in California this year shows that the weather replaces mortality. 9,000 structures. ” If it’s not convincing evidence of climate replacement, I don’t know what it is,” Newsom said at a press conference. He said progress in the glass fireplace is one of the most sensible priorities in the state.
10:29 New evacuations ordered in the Sierra due to the location of the creek chimney: New evacuation orders are in place in the spaces around Lake Florence, as firefighters expect the 322089-acre creek chimney site to spread into deep fuel, Cal Fire said Monday. North side of the chimney site, the flames deserve to burn on the rocks with a prospective movement in nature and the place of the chimney in the place of the lion burned. The place of the chimney was reduced to 48%, not to 62% as reported on Sunday due to an error of access to knowledge. , according to Cal Fire. The Sierra National Forest is absolutely closed until November 1.
9:23 am Basement devastation revealed through the camera lens: Horrible shots reveal the blows suffered by the vineyards against the glass fireplace in Napa and Sonoma counties. At least 17 were damaged, several reduced to piles of ash debris. See the shots here.
8:02 am The land of the northern complex poses a challenge of containment: the chimneys in the northern complex were contained at 83% on Monday, while air crews monitored the 318724-acre chimney. to prevent the flames from spreading through the Feathers National Forest, where steep terrain and old fuels have defied firefighters, they said Monday.
7:55 a. m. La glass fireplace is now contained in 30%: Firefighters have higher containment lines around the glass fireplace by 4% overnight The fireplace is now contained in 30% and covers 65,580 acres. The chimney grew through less than 700 acres overnight, Cal Fire said.
7: 46 August a chimney place caused by winds at night: Firefighters attacked the great August chimney place from the air and the floor while “burning vigorously with torches propelled by the wind” during the night, reported Cal Fire Monday morning. Firefighters continued to persevere as smoke and embers drove back toward crews “running into containment lines and structural protection. The chimney site, which in and around the Mendocino National Forest, destroyed 21 structures and 31” structures. minors. ”The hatcheries were expecting another hot, dry day Monday with difficult situations in thick forest and rugged, rugged terrain.
7:36 am The August fireplace exceeds 1 million acres: the August chimney monster sweeping Mendocino, Lake and Trinity counties, which has damaged all records as California’s largest wildfire to date, has now reached an astonishing milestone: it burned 1002097 acres, Cal Fire reported Monday morning. Read The Chronicle story here.
7:23 am Glass Fire Forecast: Dense, asymmetrical fog prevailed over the Bay Area coast on Monday morning, enough to anchor the planes to the OFS, but not deep enough to bring moisture to Wine Country Hills, where the glass fireplace burns. Meteorologists said the dry southerly winds shook the north bay at dawn on Monday, enough to bring smoke to Santa Rosa, though unlikely for San Francisco’s air quality, meteorologists said.
6:52 a. m. Smoke from wildfires shifts to the Bay Area on Tuesday: Smoke from the area’s wildfires “will have the greatest effect in North Bay and potentially Eastern Bay for the next 36 hours,” the Bay Area Division of the National Weather Service tweeted Monday. However, the smoke is not expected to be as dense as last week. Air quality in much of the Bay Area on Monday morning was rated as good.
6:38 a. m. Destruction of the wave of the glass fireplace site: The number of single-family homes destroyed or damaged through the glass fireplace site almost doubled on Sunday, when firefighters inspected the spaces most affected by the 64,900-acre fire. In Sonoma County, 235 houses were destroyed and 73 damaged on Sunday night, 42% more than the numbers taken in the morning. In Napa County, 252 homes were destroyed and 64 injured, 33% accumulating the day. Cal Fire is scheduled to release a new recount Monday morning, as officials get a clearer picture of the damage to residential properties.
6:31 am Zogg Fire is now contained in 76%: the site of the zogg fireplace on fire in Shasta County now measures 56,305 acres and is contained at 76%, Cal Fire said Monday. .
Updates on Sunday, October 4:
8:10 p. m. Looting is not a challenge in Napa County: Deputy Sheriff John Crawford, speaking at a news convention Sunday night about glass fire, took the microphone just after Sonoma County Sheriff Mark Essick announced that the county had arrested eight other people suspected of making plans to loot during evacuation zones. “Looting was never really a challenge in Napa,” Crawford said. “We’ve been through fires, earthquakes and floods. But we have been very blessed. “That said, he added, “we’ll ask you to explain your presence” in an evacuation zone.
8:01 p. m. Fire recovery assistance from Santa Rosa and Sonoma counties: Santa Rosa and Sonoma County open a Local Assistance Center (LAC) on Monday as a one-stop shop for chimney-affected citizens who want to connect to services. spouse in the plan. For more information, SRCity. org/LAC.
7:36 p. m. Warnings for Residents of South Lake County: The Lake County Sheriff’s Department issued a warning Sunday that citizens are in a position to evacuate as the glass fireplace approaches the county boundary that borders Napa and Sonoma counties. To log in and receive alerts on your phone, send your zip code to 888777.
7:16 p. m. The Sonoma County sheriff arrests 8 suspected looters: Sheriff’s officers have arrested eight other people who have been in a Glass Fire evacuation zone since the chimney exploded a week ago, but have been unable to say why they were there. minds who were looking for crimes of opportunity,” County Sheriff Mark Essick said at a news convention about the state of the great wildfire. “They weren’t good. “
7:02 PM The place for glass fireplaces is now contained in 26%: The site containment for glass fireplaces of approximately 65,000 acres in Sonoma and Napa counties is now at 26%, but it will be weeks before it is fully contained and controlled, Calfireplace said: “We feel smart in our,” said a Calfireplaceplace team leader. “But we’re done with this chimney spot. “
7:10 p. m. The August complex burns nearly a million acres: the large set of fires burning in Mendocino, Humboldt, Trinity, Tehama, Lake, Colusa and Glenn counties increased to 993,191 acres and is contained by 54%, Cal Fire said.
3:46 p. m. Some evacuation orders are now cautious in parts of Santa Rosa, other areas of Sonoma County: residents of some affected spaces through the glass fireplace can return home, Calfireplace said and local law enforcement. In Santa Rosa, those spaces come with Oakmont South and parts of Oakmont North and Stonebridge. Check the exceptions here, which are still under evacuation orders. Elsewhere in Sonoma County, citizens of parts of Kenwood and Porter Creek Road can return. For those spaces, check here.
3:27 p. m. Evacuation orders reduced to warnings in Calistoga, other spaces: Cal Fire will allow citizens to return to Calistoga and other affected spaces through the glass fire. However, evacuation warnings remain in place for these spaces, and evacuation orders remain in effect. in other spaces of fire. Click here for more details.
2:05 p. m. Evacuation orders raised in San Mateo County: The fatal CZU Lightning complex, which burned 86509 acres in San Mateo and Santa Cruz counties and killed a Santa Cruz County man, is contained and evacuation orders have been lifted for San Mateo County, Cal Fire reported. Lightning ignited the chimney on August 16 and ignited for 37 days, destroying 1,490 buildings. Firefighters held her on September 22, but they’ve still checked it out.
11:11 am When the flames begin, “Fire Twitter” warns and reports: Every year, when the chimney cords burst, the same goes for a network of scientists, amateur radios and hounds on Twitter. Fire experts publish articles on tornado dynamics in campfire locations, foresters answer questions about land management, and radio operators track forest firelight locations through a scanner chat and a network of publicly available fire location cameras. I count here.
10:58 am Surprising milestone for California wildfires: Fatal wildfires that are burning this year in the state eclipsed four million acres (6250 square miles) on Sunday, more than double the previous record. It’s about two months away from chimney season. The old mark established two years ago was 1. 67 million acres. “The mark of the four million is unstoppable. It amazes the brain and leaves you breathless,” said Scott McLean, Cal Fire spokesman. A larger domain was burned than Connecticut.
10:13 New evacuations in northern Napa County: Authorities ordered evacuations Sunday for several northern Napa County spaces, bordered west by Highway 29 at the start of the Robert Louis Stevenson Trail, north on Livermore Road, east on Aetna Mine Road and existing evacuation orders to the south. Authorities closed Pope Valley Road between Pope Valley Cross Road and Aetna Springs Road and Highway 29 between the Lake County border and Deer Park Road. Residents will have to leave the domain immediately.
10:11 am Heroic history of the evacuation of the house for the elderly: while a couple from Oakmont Gardens, or nearly a hundred, fled the glass fireplace, a space manager from Santa Rosa dodged the checkpoints to pass into the fireplace and help. Asimov tells the story here.
9:55 am Burning glass for chimneys in a place away from Calistoga: The glass bulb for chimneys in a place away from Calistoga was burning to the east, away from the city of Calistoga on Sunday morning, said a spokesman for Cal Fire. however, the place of the chimney lamp “is not developing towards Calistoga at this time,” cal Fire spokesman Chris Valenzuela said.
9:37 a. m. Creek Chimney Place increases to 1,753 acres overnight: Creek Chimney Lamp Place on Fire in Fresno and Madero Counties reached 315413 acres on Sunday night. Containment is greater than 62%. The place where the fireplace is located is burning on either side of the San Joaquin River near Mammoth Pool, Shaver Lake and Huntington Lake.
7:50 am The August resort’s fireplace site shows little expansion during the night: the August resort lamp place is slightly higher overnight, Cal Fire said Sunday morning. involve the site of the wildfire until Wednesday.
7:25 am Glass Fire 17% content: Glass Fire burns 63885 acres in Napa and Sonoma counties and has 17% content, Cal Fire said Sunday morning. Said the signature. The chimney destroyed about three hundred houses.
7:01 a. m. La holding of Zogg’s chimney site increased to 68%, 000, compared to 66% on Saturday night. The chimney site burned 56,305 acres.
6:49 am Glass Fire has destroyed 17 napa Valley wineries, while the world-renowned region remains under serious threat: a week after the Glass Fire began its violent path through the northern Napa Valley, one thing is certain. chimney that has known the highest wine region in the United States. Wine columnist Esther Mobley has history.
6:05 am Winds are decreasing on Mount St. Helena: after reaching its peak with gusts of up to 50 km/h, the wind speed on Mount St. Helena, near the area of the chimney site, descended to four km/h, with streaks up to 12 mph A red flag warning for the mastery of the chimney site expired at 6am
Saturday Updates:
9:30 p. m. The winds are emerging on the mountain. St. Helena: the highest wind speed on the mountain. Helena on Saturday night, with winds of 18 mph with gusts of up to 29 mph at 9:20 p. m. , according to knowledge collected through the National Weather Service at a mountain resort.
8:38 p. m. Firefighters are tracking the weather next weekend: Cal Fire Battalion chief Mark Brunton said a style for next weekend suggests a possibility of dry lightning, which said “it’s not a smart thing to hear, but it’s an outdoor possibility . . . and that “he said that some other different style suggests that there may be precipitation, but he warned that even an inch of rain would not be enough. “If we get precipitation, will it make a difference to make a difference?At best, perhaps for a day or two, but it would possibly not produce enough things in which it would absolutely extinguish the place of fire or keep us away from the danger of the place of fire,” Brunton said. All it takes is a day of a few dry north winds and Trans will look like all the moisture we get. “
8:15 p. m. Se opens the Glass Fire helpline in Santa Rosa: Sonoma County citizens affected through the Glass Fireplace can stop at a new local center that will open Monday at Maria Carrillo High School in Santa Rosa, according to Rep. Mike Thompson, Democrat of St. Helena. will be open from 1 p. m. to 7 p. m. Monday, then Tuesday, October 6 to Saturday, October 10, 10 a. m. 7 p. m.
7:55 p. m. Cal Fire will host a virtual network mount for Glass Fire: a network mount for Glass Fire will be broadcast on Cal Fire Sonoma-Lake-Napa’s Facebook page at 6 p. m. on Sunday.
7: Five2 p. m. Sonoma County opens the Glass Fire Help Center: The county opens an October assistance center Monday, October 5 at Maria Carrillo High School in Santa Rosa; will be open Monday from 1 p. m. 7 p. m. and then Tuesday, October 6 to Saturday, October 10, 10 a. m. 7 p. m.
7:35 p. m. Helicopters dumped nearly 200,000 gallons of water over Glass Fire: about 22 helicopters threw approximately 200,000 gallons of water over Glass Fire on Saturday, battalion chief Mark Brunton said in a video update. Brunton said the helicopters, along with four or five giant tankers, were “hammering dominance on Saturday,” which “helped slow the advance in the dominance of the hotel division” of the fire.
7:30 p. m. The 12 freeway corridor “looks good,” Cal Fire said: the Highway 12 aisle “looks good,” Battalion Chief Mark Brunton said in a video update. Contribution to repopulation efforts once the domain is reopened to neighbors. The road remains closed.
7:25 p. m. Glass Fire moving through Bothe State Park, Cal Fire said: Battalion chief Mark Brunton said in a video update that a “certain chimney spot” was moving in Bothe State Park in Napa Valley, causing increased fire place activity “due to wind and drought. “Brunton said there were “many” resources in this area, such as helicopters, floor crews and other resources “to combat the site of the state park fire. “
7:20 p. m. Angwin “looks good,” said battalion chief Cal Fire: Battalion chief Mark Brunton said in the video update that Angwin “always looked good. “Brunton said there were “good lines of control” and “many resources” in the area, which Cal Fire groups “very comfortable with this protection” against glass fire.
7:15 p. m. La glass fireplace containment is 15%: the glass fireplace is contained in 15% and includes 63,450 acres, up from 10% and 62,360 acres this morning, Cal Fire said.
6:53 p. m. The chimneys of the August complex are successful on 984804 acres: the large chimney complex, which burns in several counties (Mendocino, Humboldt, Trinity, Tehama, Lake, Colusa and Glenn County), has achieved 51% containment, Cal Fire said. The red flag warning is in effect in the domain for Saturday night.
6:40 p. m. La Zogg Fire contention reaches 66%, said Cal Fire: Zogg Fire, which burns in Shasta County, burned 56,305 acres and 66% contained Saturday night, Cal Fire said, compared to 57% on Saturday morning, with no chimney growth. said 1,767 firefighters were fighting the fire with 196 engines, 55 water supplies, 14 helicopters and 24 bulldozers.
5:38 p. m. FEMA FireFighting Assistance Available for Glass Fires: FEMA provided chimney control assistance on September 28 to cover up to 75% of eligible prices for glass firefighting, but no federal crises have been declared, meaning patients are not yet eligible for assistance. Congressman Mike Thompson, a St. Helena Democrat, said Saturday that this may not happen until existing damage tests are completed, presented, and reviewed to see if they meet the criteria.
5:27 p. m. The Napa County Fire Chief warns citizens that the season of chimney spots is now a “year-round occasion”: “The truth of life in California now, the season for chimney venues is a year-round occasion and other people want to start making plans and integrating that into their way of thinking” Said Napa County Fire Chief Geoff Belyea in a live video on Facebook Saturday afternoon, who suggested citizens prepare bags containing vital documents, a transparent defensible space, leave gutter sheets and stack firewood next to the houses and know two evacuation routes outside their neighborhoods.
5:26 p. m. Se about the place of the glass lamp for fireplaces in Palisades: The main place of the chimney lamp occurred on Saturday in the Palisades area, just west of Highway 29, said Napa County Fire Chief Geoff Belyea. move north towards Calistoga or at the southern end of the east aspect of the Silverado Trail. Crews are making progress in building chimneys, cables, cables, lines on the west side of Highway 29 between Spring Mountain Road and Whitehall Lane, but the terrain is very damaging and the paints are slowing down, Belyea said.
5:25 p. m. The video for Cal Fire’s video shows smoke near Bothe-Napa Valley State Park: A video taken from an in-flight plane near Bothe-Napa Valley State Park shows thick clouds of smoke emerging from the glass fire, according to a video shared through Cal Fire’s Sonoma-Lake – Napa Unit on Saturday afternoon. Cal’s fire officers said the Glass Fire “was very active. “
5:23 p. m. Middlet, city citizens can see smoke, flames: the Glass Fire has not entered Lake County, Cal Fire officials said Saturday afternoon, but citizens of Middlethe city, a Lake County that is no stranger to wildfires, can see smoke and flames. Evacuation orders or warnings have been issued for Lake County, but citizens are asked to remain vigilant. The glass fireplace is lit near Highway 29 in northern Napa County, near the edge of Lake County.
5:08 p. m. Santa Rosa publishes a damage map: the city of Santa Rosa launched an interactive map online showing the damage caused to the city’s homes through the glass fireplace. The chimney devastated east of Santa Rosa on Sunday and Monday. The card allows others to enter addresses and see the scope of damaged assets.
5:10 p. m. Nearly 4 million burned acres across California: Shawna Jones, leader of Cal Fire’s Sonoma Lake Napa unit, said 3. 9 million acres across the state had burned down this year, killing 31 people. Nearly 17,000 firefighters are actively fighting fires, 2,500 affected through glass fire. Seven more states are helping.
4:56 p. m. Wind gusts up to 35 m. p. h. expected in the chimney area: “Winds are expected to continue northwest at 15-25 mph, with streaks of 25 to 35 mph,” the National Weather Service tweeted.
4:30 p. m. Red flag warning issued in North Bay: The National Weather Service has issued a red flag warning for the North Bay Mountains from now until 6 a. m. Sunday. An earlier warning had been allowed to expire at 6 a. m. On Saturday, the smoke removal allowed warm, dry situations to expand and the strong northwesterly winds to return, the weather service said. The warning reissued a sadness for firefighters waiting for cooler temperatures and gentle winds at night.
3:23 p. m. Se some Santa Rosa evacuation warnings have been raised: Click for more details.
3:15 p. m. The tankers return to Glass Fire: three giant tankers, adding a 747, return to the skies of Wine Country on Saturday afternoon to enter the match opposing the Glass Fire. The smoldering skies had prevented Cal Fire from taking off fixed-wing aircraft. In recent days, even clearer skies allowed them to return, said Donna Sager, cal Fire spokeswoman. The tankers launched a large amount of bright orange soft retardant and enrolled in a fleet of helicopters throwing buckets or water or retardant.
2:09 p. m. ” Not much destruction or damage” in St. Helena: Janet Upton, spokeswoman for the Napa County Emergency Operations Center, said the glass fireplace had not burned in the city center and that there was “not much impact” in terms of destruction or damage. Cal Fire is still conducting his investigation to record an official recount. Fire activity on Saturday night was moderate due to lack of winds and the place of fire did not move downhill towards Highway 29 or not Bale Grist Mill, according to a city press release. On Saturday, precedence spaces come with Aetna Springs, Angwin, Pope’s Valley and Robert Luis Stevenson’s domain near Mount St. Helena.
1:28 p. m. La city of Calistoga warns of an “increase in activity in the places of the firelights”: the people under evacuation warned citizens of an alert in Nixle on Saturday afternoon that significant activity of the places of the firelights had intensified in some domains, namely, along Highway 29/Lake County Highway, just south of Lake County. Line. Y in the Diamond Mountain / Kortum Canyon domain near the edge of Sonoma County. Air quality is at harmful levels. The chimney lamp site destroyed 173 single-family homes and 264 advertising homes in Napa County, none within the city limits of Calistoga.
1:26 p. m. Sonoma County Sheriff has no plans to lift evacuations today: After conversations with Cal Fire, the sheriff has no plans to lift evacuation orders on Saturday, according to a Facebook post. The glass chimney destroyed 120 single-family homes, 4 multi-family apartments, and 8 advertising buildings in the county.
1:20 p. m. Evacuations have been eased in parts of San Mateo County: Cal Fire has lowered evacuation orders as warnings in 3 San Mateo County spaces affected by the CZU Lightning Complex fire, which is now fully controlled.
12:44 Angwin well protected, Cal Fire said: The glass place of the chimney remains dangerously close to the city of Angwin, which has been completely evacuated for days, but the head of the Cal Fire Battalion, Mark Brunton, said firefighters were confident in the city, which houses Pacific Union and a hospital, is well protected , surrounded by lines of place for campfires and staff through various equipment of places for campfires. It also houses a base where helicopters load timers to jump over the Glass Fire. “This is a very vital network for napa Valley, ” he said in a video that was recorded on Saturday.
12:40 p. m. Firefighters wounded at Zogg Chimney: On Friday night, two firefighters arrested were injured while banging on zogg chimney in Shasta County and transferred to a local hospital. One firefighter was released and another is still hospitalized, Cal Fire reported on Saturday.
12:30 p. m. Clearer skies and a military cloak can battle Glass Fire’s chimneys: Cal Fire officials hope that this afternoon’s gentle winds can simply transparent the skies enough to allow more aircraft to be used in the war as opposed to the Glass Fire. Thick gray smoke suspended in hills, canyons and valleys has limited the use of helicopters and specific tanker trucks selling water retarders and fireplaces in the fireplace. Weather forecasts for a sea layer to enter the Glass Fire domain up to 1,000 feet above sea point on Saturday night also give hope to chimney fighters, Cal Fire spokesman Chris Valenzuela said, “I hope we can make genuine progress at night,” He said Saturday afternoon.
12:18 PM Conditions around Calistoga improve: firefighters continue to fight the glass fireplace, however, Cal Fire Battalion chief Mark Brunton said Saturday afternoon that “Calistoga looks much better” with chimney groups building more lines in the area. The winds whipped the embers in some spaces during the night, but chimney fighters were able to prevent the spot chimneys from spreading.
12:01 p. m. Zogg Fire’s progress continues as firefighters continue to advance toward Zogg Chimney Site west of Redding in Shasta County. The chimney site blackened 56,305 acres and destroyed 179 buildings, adding homes and businesses like the iconic Ono store, but is now contained by 57%. lifted some evacuation orders and the Whiskeytown Reservoir, which is no longer used through firefighting helicopters to collect huge buckets of water, has reopened navigation and recreation.
11:40 am People who fled Creek Fire can recover their belongings: Dozens of other people who fled Creek Fire when they roared into a popular recreation domain over Labor Day weekend will be able to make reservations to return to camps and cabins to retrieve their Saturday, Sierra National Forest officials said the fire , which charred 312,063 acres, is contained in 51%. On September 4, he ran to the working-class district of Mammoth Pool, displacing many others, forcing many people to flee through flames on foot or by car. Scores also had to be stored in an army helicopter.
11:37 am The rescued mountain lion cub has a call: the wounded mountain lion cub and orphan rescued through a Cal Fire firefighter from the Zogg fire and treated at the Oakland Zoo has earned a call and appetite, zoo officials reported. – Captain Cal, six weeks old, nicknamed by Cal Fire’s mascot. He is being treated for burns to his feet and appears to be regaining his appetite, according to zoo veterinarians.
7:55 a. m. Latest news about the creek chimneys in Fresno, Wood counties: the creek chimney now has 312063 acres and is contained in 49%, according to Cal Fire.
7:46 a. m. Zogg’s fatal chimney site grows, but so does containment: Zogg’s chimney site in Shasta and Tehama counties highest overnight, reaching 56,305 acres, Cal Fire reported Saturday morning. The chimney site, which killed four people, is now under control by 57%. Tanker trucks across the state are shutting down chimney locations, if situations permit, Cal Fire said.
7:32 am: August Complex now 979,386 acres: The August complex’s fireplace site – the largest fireplace site in California history – is now 979,386 acres, Cal Fire reported Saturday morning, and is contained by 51%. There are still more than 11,000 structures threatened. through the great fireplace place, which burns in parts of Mendocino, Humboldt, Trinity, Tehama, Lake, Colusa and Glenn counties.
7:18 am A glass place for fireplaces is developed overnight: The glass place for chimneys in Napa and Sonoma counties climbed a little over 1,200 acres overnight, emerging to 62360 acres on Saturday morning, according to Cal Fire. – 8% to 10% – this period.
6:00 am Red Flag Warning Expiration: A red flag warning, signifying a significant hazard at the scene of a fire to the North Bay Mountains, East Bay Hills, Diablo Mountains, and Santa Cruz Mountains expired Saturday tomorrow, according to the National Weather Service. , the expected winds that worried firefighters never materialized. Another brief gust of northwesterly winds may have an effect on the location of the glass chimney later Saturday afternoon and evening, but is expected to be located in gusts in the 25-30 mph diversity, the NWS said. .
5:52 am When the flames begin, “Fire Twitter” heats up: Each and every year, when chimneys explode in California and the West, so do a small network of scientists, radio amateurs and Twitter journalists. Use all social media to answer a call in real-time data development, research, and discussion, as incredibly destructive chimneys set the horrific norm in motion, and the data they provide is a component of the critical link between firefighters, the media and the public. the full story here.
5:26 am heroic hitale of the evacuation of the nursing home in the early hours of Glass Fire: with his center hitting, Jamie Gralund pressed his foot on the fuel and blew through the police checkpoint, seeking help evacuating the elders from Oakmont Gardens to Santa Rosa. Read the full story here.
12:25 p. m. Quiet winds in the glass fireplace area: winds have remained calm in the Bay Area with the exception of The Mountain, Tamalpais and Altamont Pass, which experienced wind gusts at red flag level of 18 to 25 mph, according to the National Weather Service. .
12:18 p. m. Firefighters are battering several unique fires: firefighters have fought several unique fires in the Glass Fire area, adding fires on Ink Grade Road near Angwin, according to scanner reports.
Updates for Friday, October 2:
7:30 p. m. The place of the glass lamp for fireplaces is still furious, but the containment is expanding slightly: the place of the chimney lamps that began on Sunday has now burned 61,150 acres in Napa and Sonoma counties, facing 59,000 acres on Thursday night, according to a Report by Cal Fire on Friday night. from 5% at the end of Thursday. There are 2,611 workers involved in the effort, as well as 21 helicopters for water droplets and 74 bulldozers to make connection lines for fire lamps. The conflagration has destroyed 293 single-family homes and more than 28,000 structures are still threatened.
7:05 p. m. Cal Fire stores a glass fire photo the night it began: Cal Fire Sonoma-Lake-Napa’s unit shared on Twitter a photo depicting flames in the hills “over a Crystal Springs Road winery in Napa County” after 7 p. m. on the day the chimney went out. exploded, Cal Fire said.
6:48 p. m. Cal Fire invites others to call the Glass Fire Information Center to ask questions: The Cal Fire unit in Sonoma-Lake-Napa invited others on Twitter to call the Glass Fire Information Center for answers to their questions about the fire. 707-967-4207 or call 211.
6:50 p. m. More progress opposed to zogg Fire: Cal Fire reported another day of progress in the fight opposing the Zogg Fire near Redding that killed 4 other people after it broke out on Sunday afternoon. 56,168 acres, and is now contained at 56%, compared to 39% on Thursday night. There were 170 structures destroyed and 101 structures remained threatened.
6:30 p. m. Fire situations in Sonoma County are sometimes stable: the glass fireplace continues to threaten giant sedations in Napa County, the western flank of Sonoma County was quiet on Friday, county officials said at a press conference, but another 16,542 people remain under evacuation orders, many of them Christina Rivera , director of emergency operations, said the county also had more than 400 animals in her care: two hundred horses, 123 chickens, 68 goats, 12 quails and two flames. , even the valuable pets we have, ” said Rivera.
6:21 p. m. California wildfires approach four million acres this year: Cal Fire reports that since the beginning of the year, more than 8,200 wildfires have burned more than 3. 9 million acres in California. More than 53,000 citizens are now evacuated across the state. The large death toll increased this week to 31 after the Lightning LNU victim succumbed to his injuries, Cal Fire reported.
3:55 p. m. La most evacuees of Santa Rosa can return home: Cal Fire has reduced evacuation orders to “evacuation warnings” for all parts of the city of Santa Rosa that have not been burned. “Stay tuned for existing fireplace conditions. “
3:30 p. m. Napa Vineyards in Evacuation or Warning Areas Number 215: There are now 215 wineries in Napa County under mandatory evacuation or evacuation warning, according to Janet Upton, Napa County Public Data Officer, a building of 72 from Monday. To date, 17 wineries have experienced significant damage from glass fire.
3:15 p. m. Sonoma County evacuation orders were lifted: several spaces that were under evacuation order along the western edge of the glass fireplace were upgraded to the “evacuation warning” state. They come with spaces to the east and south of Santa Rosa, south of Annadel National Park and on the ridges east of Windsor. A complete list is here.
2:55 p. m. The situations of the glass chimney sites remain “almost critical”: the strong winds that caused a red flag warning in the Bay Area did not materialize on Thursday night, wind situations and warm temperatures until Saturday may increase the spread of the place of the glass lamp along the north and east flanks in Napa County Cal Fire meteorologist Tom Bird said Friday afternoon. We continue critical situations of places where the stoves are located today and tonight,” Bird said in a briefing on Cal Fire’s Facebook page. Sunday can bring bigger situations, he said, with west winds carrying a little more humidity and cooler temperatures.
2:30 p. m. People looking to pass the barricades of chimneys: Santa Rosa police are suffering to deter evacuees from returning to evacuated spaces to search their homes, as well as others waiting to take a look at the devastation in burned spaces, police leader Ray Navarro said. He said his subsidiary hadn’t made arrests for looting or robberies in the evacuated spaces, but added, “If you don’t live in the area, don’t come and watch. “Sonoma County Sheriff Mark Essick said his branch has added another 50 officers to patrol evacuated spaces for looters.
14:24 “Dangerous” Napa Air Quality: Air quality at a Napa Valley College tracking station reached degrees deemed “dangerous” between 10 a. m. M. Y. 11 a. m. , the rest of the bay domain was in “unhealthy” degrees due to smoke.
2 p. m. Cal Fire monitors winery staff: despite nearby flames and expected winds that can push the glass fireplace through the corridor of Highway 29, many winery employees are still working on the critical harvest season. “While this is understandable, this “There’s another fear for Cal Fire,” battalion chief Mark Brunton said at a news convention on Friday. “There are a lot of industries running in the area,” he said, “and it’s their protection and fireplace” that’s attracting the attention of firefighters.
1:35 p. m. CHP says it’s not a weekend to make a stopover at Wine Country: CHP Wine Country commander Aristotle Wolfe said other people had done a smart job of avoiding road closures and barricades in the glass fireplace, but he fears weekend travelers will head to wineries or a favorite park. or restaurant, follow the trail of the fireplace department and shake traffic, especially on Highway 29 and the Silverado Trail, any of which have barricades. “These are routes that other people are used to traveling,” he says. for that. “
12:28 p. m. The heat, wind and record weather are the only slotters of wildfires: California’s burning and record wildfire crisis can also temporarily become politics, as state leaders check for an ever-increasing challenge with a range of solutions, none of which are easy, with the climate change war not the only challenge : the state will have to face its plant-covered forests and their wrong progression patterns. Read The Chronicle’s summary of the path to solutions.
10:38 The Oakland Zoo Treats a Zogg Fire Mountain Lion Cub: Oakland Zoo Veterinarians Treat an Orphaned Mountain Lion Cub Rescued by a Zogg Fire Firefighter in Shasta County. absolutely burnt whiskers and seriously irritated eyes. With medication and a special milk formula, he acted enthusiastically, a promising sign, according to Dr. Alex Herman of the zoo. Because mountain lion cubs stay with their mothers for two years, they may not be released into the wild once they recover, zoo officials said.
9:25 am A tent belonging to the congregation’s circle of family members is set on fire: among the 159 buildings destroyed by the Zogg chimney site in Shasta County was the Ono store, an antique shop in the town of Ono, west of Redding. , near where the chimney site was lit on Sunday. He belonged to Bruce and Sherry Wicks, parents of Berkeley Democrat Deputy Buffy Wicks in the 1970s, tweeted. He called it “a general jewelArray store . . . a restaurant, a bar, grocery store, weather service and library in this period. “It was destroyed when the chimney site exploded until Monday.
8:50 a. m. Firefighters continue to win in Zogg Fire: Zogg Fire, which burns west of Redding in Shasta County, killed 4 other people and destroyed 159 buildings as it traversed 56,018 acres since its Fire the SundayArray. But for more than two nights, firefighters have made significant progress around the fire with containment lines. Friday morning, 46% content.
8:46 a. M. The August community continues to grow: the large August community that spans parts of five Northern California counties, which is already the largest chimney in California history, has continued to grow overnight, surpassing 970,000 acres. On September 10 in Mendocino County, it was reduced to 51% on Friday morning. Inflammation burns in steep and steep forests and terrain and “remains very active,” according to Cal Fire officials.
8:39 am Notice of heat in the Bay Area until 8 pm: The heat warning in the Bay Area remains until Friday at 8 pm Santa Rosa and other cities in the north of the Bay Valley are expected to reach 101, while temperatures in the middle were forecast in the 1980s for Oakland and San Francisco , and three-digit mercury for indoor areas, adding Gilroy, Livermore and Concord, but National Weather Service meteorologists forecast cooler temperatures for the weekend and next week.
8:14 am Strong winds fuel glass fire, and sustained winds and gusts of up to forty-five mph are expected to hit elevations in the Bay Area on Friday, according to the National Weather Service. heures. et 10 p. m. , which can complicate efforts to involve glass fire. “The fuels are incredibly dry. There’s an active fire. Any build-up of winds is not a smart recipe,” meteorologist Ryan Walbrun said.
7:45 am The place of the glass lamp for the fireplace remains slightly contained: despite the lighter winds than expected at night, the place of the glass lamp for the fireplace continued to grow, according to Cal Fire officials. , and is now contained in 6%. A total of 220 houses were demolished in Napa and Sonoma counties, as well as dozens of other structures. Approximately 29,000 buildings are still under threat.
6:47 Zogg Fire contention increases to 46%, up from 39% on Thursday night. The fire, which is located in Shasta and Tehama counties, burned 56,018 acres, Cal Fire said, up from 55,803 on Thursday night. He destroyed 159 structures and left four dead.
6:09 a. m. , Spare the Air alert effective Tuesday: Smoke and smog will continue to have an effect in the Bay Area, prompting officials to increase Spare the Air’s alert through Tuesday.
5:59 am The heat continues, the winds may increase this afternoon: the arm of the National Weather Service of the Bay Area reports that “situations of very hot to hot and dry will persist in the domain until Friday”, resulting in “critical climatic situations of chimneys on high ground, especially where chimneys continue”. In addition, although the winds have been light, the weather service expects a “stronger NW pulse this afternoon and night. “
5:39 am Air quality remains poor: measurements of fine particles due in the Bay Area ranged from “unhealthy for sensitive groups” to “very unhealthy” early Friday morning, with the worst reading, in the “very unhealthy” category 3 am in Napa Official knowledge of air quality was delayed by a few hours in real time.
five: 19 a. m. Wind gusts on the mountain. St. Helena remains weak: despite fears of rainy weather at the chimney site, the winds on the mountain. St. Helena, who is in the domain of the glass fireplace site, remained in a figure overnight. Shortly after five o’clock in the morning, the wind speed was 6 miles consistent with the hour, with 8-mile streaks consistent with the hour.
2:30 a. m. Firefighters are fighting the grass fire lamp site in Solano County: Fairfield County Fire Department and Solano Fire Lamp were fighting a grass fire lamp site near Business Center Drive and Suisun Parkway, an emergency dispatcher from Fairfield told The Chronicle. There were no threats to the structures and no injuries were reported. Dispatch said the progress of the fire lamp site stopped until 2:30 a. m. on Friday. The cause of the fire lamp lamp is unknown without delay.
1:45 a. m. Teams respond to the site of a space fireplace near Calistoga: firefighters responded to a report of a chimney site in a two-story space at 1320 Tucker Road. The space “fully involved” and citizens had been safely evacuated, according to reports from the scanners.
9:30 am A large fire pit is being developed in the August complex: August’s fire location complex, which is by far the largest fire pit in state history, stretching across portions of five northern counties fed another 500 acres on Thursday, bringing the total to 956,084. remains at 47%, according to a Cal Fire report on Thursday night. “Relatively speaking, it’s a pretty smart day, it could have been a lot worse” because of the winds and dry landscapes,” Said Captain AJLester of Cal Fire. “But 500 acres in themselves are pretty big. “
Thursday, October 1 updates
8 p. m. Firefighters are struggling to save a space off Highway 29 near Calistoga: Firefighters were running to save a space just off Highway 29, north of Old Lawley Toll Road, as flames hit the apartment on Thursday night. Michael Williams of the Chronicle filmed the scene.
7:30 pm: The place of the glass lamp for the fireplace arrives on 60,000 acres, only 5% is contained: the place of the glass lamp for the fireplace grew to 58880 acres on Thursday night, according to an update of Cal Fire, a 7,500-acre building Wednesday night. In total, 220 homes in Napa and Sonoma counties, up from 143 on Wednesday, and 28,835 are threatened. Evening said the threats against Santa Rosa had receded.
7:35 p. m. The place of the glass fireplace burns near Angwin: Cal Fire spokesman Scott McLean told The Chronicle that while the place of the glass fireplace “actively burns” around Angwin, “there is nothing in the city itself. , (but) it is not in the city that destroys the structures. “McLean said Angwin, Calistoga and the domain near Highway 29 have proven to be complicated spaces for firefighters, bombers and bombers on the ground. “With weather conditions, they’re breaking it, trying to make sure they’re ready and they’re still ready, and get some lines. It’s hard to avoid, ” said McLean.
7 pm Zogg Fire now at 39% content: firefighters had “a very successful day” in their efforts to reach zogg’s chimney site near Redding, according to Cal Fire. The place of the chimney that began on September 27 is described as “minimum expansion in size”, and the containment of 39% is greater than the 26% previously reported in the day. However, there are still many road closures; 153 structures have been destroyed and another 1,548 remain threatened.
5 p. m. ” We all feel scruffy,” said Napa County Supervisor: The Napa County Supervisory Board held a special assembly Thursday afternoon to ratify the state of emergency and public fitness emergency that officials declared Monday after the glass fireplace exploded. Supervisor Belia Ramos suggested to citizens Stay strong: “We all feel uncomfortable right now. It probably wouldn’t be easy, we know, but we’re going to get out of those tough times. “
4:09 p. m. La the Napa Valley Museum saga: On September 24, the museum opened an online exhibition of photographs of forest chimneys through Tim Carl, a current Calistoga resident and St. Louis local. Helena, four days later, the photographer and the museum’s executive director evacuated their homes as the glass fireplace stretched out. We took refuge in the museum itself. Read the story here.
4:08 p. m. Firefighters Fight On Edge of Glass Fire: About 4 miles north of Calistoga, fire station crews ignored flames in a steep ravine below a home. Hand crews had already cleared the lines at the fire site and a California National Guard helicopter circled several times, dropping water. in the fireplace place. The winds were calm in the remote hills.
3:35 p. m. La luck is running low for the Napa wine region: few napa Valley spaces have escaped forest fires in recent years, however Spring Mountain has been lucky. Napa, while the glass fireplace swept the area: Spring Mountain has become Napa’s last battlefield. Read the latest news here.
3:27 p. m. Napa County is wrong on high alert, creating confusion: an unknown number of citizens in the Bay Area, even in spaces without chimneys, won erroneous emergency warnings Thursday of warning of an imminent danger of chimney. others won messages for only a small number of Napa County citizens threatened through a glass fireplace. The error was attributed to a challenge in Napa County’s alert system. Learn more here.
3:17 p. m. Route 29 closed in Lake County: Caltrans closed Highway 29 on Bradford Road approximately one mile north of the Napa County boundary/lake due to the nearby glass fireplace. There are no express opening times, it’s still burning in Lake County, but it threatens to enter the county near Highway 29.
3:05 p. m. Flex Alert in effect: With maximum temperatures across the state, power grid officials are asking Californians to save strength until 10 p. m. Thursday.
2:40 p. m. Santa Rosa Fire Chief: Early evacuations, consciousness has not resulted in deaths: so far, no deaths have been reported in the glass fire, Santa Rosa Fire Chief Anthony Gossner said Thursday, claiming that the awareness and evacuation network took place almost without delay after Sunday’s fires. “We are an experienced network,” he said.
2:30 p. m. The director of Cal Fire said the fire position lines were long enough to succeed in New York: firefighters who fought the California series of fire position positions have put enough lines of fire position containment in position to enlarge from San Diego to New York, Cal Fire director said Thursday , Thom Porter. By Thursday afternoon, 23 primary fire positions were burning in the state and fire position fighters from various states, and the National Guard, Canada, Mexico and Israel are breaking the position positions of fire.
2:07 p. m. Glass Fire Fight includes Lake County: Glass Fire Fight now includes Lake County, said On Thursday Billy See, deputy director of Cal Fire. Even if the fireplace does not burn in the interior of the county, it has experienced several primary chimneys in the more than five years. , you can still cross the boundaries of the county. Teams are operating within Lake County to prevent this from happening, he said at an afternoon press conference.
2 p. m. Looking for crystal fire lighting: in the fifth podcast
1:40 p. m. Firefighting groups now come with 2,200 bodies of army workers: some 2,200 corps of army workers are helping to combat California’s 23 active wildfires, California National Guard Attorney General David said Thursday afternoon. being used to map fires and drop water and retarder, he said at a news convention in Santa Rosa.
1:50 p. m. Raindrops are approaching: Californians suffering from a season of hellfires have only one ray of hope: meteorologists say we can start seeing measurable rains as soon as a week Forecast models show a 50% chance that the Bay Area will get up general precipitation october 8-14 , according to the National Weather Service. Read the main points here.
1:22 p. m. Californians are asked to stay strong from 3 p. m. 10 p. m. : Californians are suggested to avoid power outages by saving electric power because heat and smoke at the top are putting pressure on the power grid. 3 pm-10pm. Jueves. La people put the air conditioners at 78 degrees or more and turn off unnecessary appliances to decrease demand. Read the story here.
1:11 p. m. New evacuations in Napa County: Authorities have issued a mandatory evacuation order for Whitehall Lane to the Bella Oaks domain near Rutherford in Napa County, which covers dominance south of the end of South Whitehall Lane and north of the end of Bella Oaks Lane. west to the edge of Sonoma County and includes directions above the 500 block on Wall Road. An evacuation warning has been issued for Oakville Grade’s Bella Lane spaces.
12:51 pm Fire threatens Angwin and Pope Valley: Cal Fire said Thursday that an “active fire” pushes glass fire flames toward the communities of Angwin and Pope Valley. “We have a lot of resources in and around Angwin,” Chief Battalion Mark Bruntwin said, but the overall resources are insufficient.
12:37 p. m. Newsom is circling around Glass Fire: Governor Gavin Newsom, on the tour of destruction left by the voracious Glass Fire in Napa and Sonoma counties, said Thursday on Twitter: “It is heartbreaking to see the devastation caused by this fire. grateful to firefighters and lifeguards who fought tirelessly to keep this net safe.
12:25 p. m. La Highway 29 in Napa has a fireplace: Cal Fire said Thursday that Napa Vineyard Highway Room 29 had flames and chimney hazards. The grape harvest is allowed to continue as this is a critical time for the industry, Chief Mark Brunton said. “We’ll be watching this closely. “
12:20 p. m. The place where the glass fireplace is located on the outskirts of Calistoga: Firefighters worked Thursday to slow down the place where the glass fireplace is located on the outskirts of Calistoga, as it threatened the city, Cal Fire Battalion Chief Mark Brunton said Thursday. were making an “active defense of the structure. ” They concentrated on the northwest winds with the possibility of pushing towards the corridor of Highway 29, he said. In rural Palisades, near St. Helena, rugged terrain and fuel plants prevented firefighters from advancing and stopping their progress north to Lake County.
11:51 a. m. Marin County says the danger alert instead of a fire lamp is not for the county: Marin County officials told citizens on Thursday not to worry if they won a “Extreme fire lamp place hazard” message because it was not intended for them: “We won the news that @CountyofNapa sent a message” extreme “Danger message instead of fire lamp” through the wireless emergency alert system. It is not intended for citizens of Marin County; There is NO evacuation in place #MarinCounty,” tweeted the county’s official Twitter page.
11:30 Cal Fire, a small fireplace on Oakville Grade Road: Cal Fire responded to a small fireplace on Oakville Grade Road west of Yountville, several miles south of where the Glass Fire is active, spokesman Dominik Schwab confirmed. additional details, however, a source at the scene told The Chronicle that the flames had been extinguished, the teams were cleaning up and a Cal Fire investigator was looking to discover the cause.
10:45 am Fires are wreaking havoc on the Internet, Cellular connectivity: the fireplace that destroys glass has broken the vulnerable infrastructure of Internet and mobile telephony, the newest in highlighting the pressing need for more resilient connections as fires in Northern California tear down power poles, destroy optical cables cut power, while evacuation orders and other emergency communications have online communications. Read the story here.
10:08 am, Newsom will scale in the area of place of glass lamp for fireplaces: Governor Gavin Newsom plans to make stopover in the area of place of glass lamp for fireplaces on Thursday morning, as firefighters are ready for emergency situations with dry winds and warm temperatures. precise location, but said he’d be on the scene at 11:30 a. m.
10:05 am Fires of the fully controlled LNU and SCU complexes: the fires of the LNU and SCU complexes, started by lightning on August 16, were nevertheless fully controlled. Cal Fire announced thursday morning the elusive hundred percent containment figure. The fires, the LNU in North Bay and the SCU in East Bay and Central Valley, burned more than 760,000 acres, killed five other people and destroyed 1,700 structures.
9:14 am Heat warning: Stay indoors: the National Weather Service has issued a heat warning for Thursday, forecasting punitive temperatures, which emerge well above one hundred degrees in chimney areas and other areas of the interior. dawn, with little or no fog along the coast, and is expected to increase to the 1990s decline in San Francisco and along the bay to around a hundred in Napa and in inland Eastern Bay cities such as Livermore and Brentwood. suggested that others stay indoors, stay hydrated and long periods of intense exercise. Read the story here.
9:03 a. m. How to help firefighters and victims: Many rescue teams are helping firefighters and citizens suffering from record wildfires in Northern California. The Chronicle provides a list of features on how it can help.
8:22 am: 5% of the place of the glass fireplace contained: The place of the burning glass fireplace in Napa and Sonoma counties contained 5% on Thursday morning, said Cal Fire, a 3% improvement overnight. The chimney site, which moved tens of thousands of people and destroyed more than a hundred houses, reached just about 57,000 acres.
8:15 am Extreme hazards at fire locations in the August complex: Firefighters in the northern component of the August complex who broke August complex records at Trinity and Humboldt County reported 0 visibility due to dense smoke, Cal Fire reported thursday. 955,513 acres and 47% contained Thursday morning. Highly combustible vegetation, fallen trees, falling power lines and the explosion of fuel tanks are among the dangers, Cal Fire said.
8:05 am Iced air Thursday: Air quality is expected to largely of the Bay domain worsen on Thursday as glass smoke in Napa and Sonoma counties blows south, driven by winds up to 30 mph later in the day. alert, which persisted for much of the week, is in effect until at least Friday. Read the story with the main points about air quality in the region.
7:32 Batted Butte County struggles to space displaced people: housing advocates and homeless people say the pandemic and wildfires have combined to overwhelm a difficult county that was already experiencing a housing crisis, with many families living in cars, sheds and tents. overcrowded in the apartments. Fires in the northern complex have left a lot of families homeless as the county continues since the 2018 campfire that swept through the city of Paradise. Read the story here.
7:14 am Wildfires increase housing needs: last month’s CZU chimneys forced the evacuation of 1 in five Santa Cruz County residents, or 60,000 people, and destroyed nearly 1,000 homes. some of the county’s maximum housing units, adding tension to an already expensive market amid a housing crisis across the state. Read the main points here.
6:54 am Thursday’s red flag warning is unfolding: the National Weather Service has extended the territory with its red flag warning, which takes effect Thursday afternoon, to reach East Bay Hills and the Santa Cruz Mountains. issued on Wednesday, comes with the North Bay Mountains and dominance around the glass fire. The warning will take effect at 1 p. m. on Thursday and at least until 6 p. m. On Friday, forecasts are maximum winds, maximum temperatures and low humidity, situations that can stoke the flames of glass fire.
6:48 a. m. Se raised the evacuation warning for Paradise: the reduction of chimneys and weather situations led the agencies that responded to the chimney of the northern complex to raise the evacuation warning for the city of Paradise on Wednesday afternoon.
6:34 Zogg Fire 26% under control: Firefighters reported a really long progress as opposed to the Zogg chimney site in Shasta and Tehama counties, with containment expanding from 9% to 26% overnight. to a report through Cal Fire on Thursday morning. The chimney site, which killed four other people and destroyed 147 structures, now has a 55,303-acre domain.
Wednesday, September 30 updates:
7:20 p. m. The glass fire reaches 51,266 acres: the glass fire burned 51,266 acres and 2% contained Wednesday night, Cal Fire said. The fireplace destroyed 36 single-family homes in Sonoma County and 107 in Napa County, and threatened another 26,290 structures, Cal Fire said. Officials said 2,108 firefighters were fighting the fire with 37 water supplies, 22 helicopters and 81 excavators.
7:05 p. m. More evacuation orders, warnings in parts of Napa County for a glass fireplace: The glass fireplace is generating new evacuation orders and warnings for parts of Napa County, Cal Fire Sonoma-Lake-Napa Unit said on Twitter on Wednesday night.
6:50 p. m. The state’s network operator is asking consumers for their power consumption Thursday afternoon: California’s independent formula operator has called a Flex alert for 3 p. m. at 10 p. m. on Thursday in anticipation of three-digit heat, according to Pacific Gas officials
3:40 p. m. All St. Helena is now under evacuation order or warning: St. Helena police chief Chris Hartley told the Chronicle that the northern and western ends of the city, that is, the parts of the city that oppose the hill, are under an evacuation order. “which represents only about a quarter of our city’s barriers. “Hartley said: “The other three rooms are under an evacuation warning. Most of the city is under evacuation caution only.
3:38 p. m. Fires cause Internet outages: Wildfires can destroy Internet and mobile phone infrastructure, causing more disruption to citizens fleeing flames because they lose emergency alerts.
3:22 p. m. Nearly four million acres have burned in the state this year: more than 8,100 wildfire sites have devastated more than 3. 9 million acres in California this forest fire season, according to Cal Fire, advancing toward the four million-acre mark, double the 2018 record of 1. 98 million burned acres. With the fire stations, 29 dead and the destruction of more than 7,200 structures occurred on Wednesday.
3:15 p. m. Body discovered in Shasta County: Cal Fire said the body of fourth victim of the Zogg chimney discovered amid the ashes in Shasta County. The fireplace, near Redding, burned 50,000 acres uncontrollably, with 146 structures lost. houses and other buildings are still under threat, authorities said Wednesday.
3:10 p. m. The place of the glass fireplace is a “great challenge”: the place of the glass fireplace has made its biggest impulse east of Santa Rosa, where nothing has been burned in 80 years, creating gunpowder barrel situations after a dry winter, as more than 2000 team members fight the chimney site. “It doesn’t take long for the chimney sites to settle there,” Cal’s fire chief Mark Brunton said Wednesday. “Even without the wind, it’s still a big challenge. “Read the story here.
2:55 p. m. Camp Pendleton Evacuations: Firefighters ordered aspiring evacuation of Camp Pendleton, County San Diepass, on Wednesday after a wildfire broke out on the east side of the Marine Corps base. evacuated and evacuees move to Paige Field House.
2:12 p. m. Five other people arrested in evacuation zones: five others have been arrested for being inside Glass Fire evacuation zones without approval, Sonoma County Sheriff Mark Essick said Wednesday, but no looting has been reported. “These other people had no legal activity there, however, we suspected they were for opportunity crimes,” he said. Santa Rosa also did not have reports of looters in the city. Sheriffs and police officers patrol the evacuated areas.
1:39 p. m. Zogg Fire claims the fourth victim: the Zogg Fire that wiped out approximately 52,000 acres of Shasta County killed a fourth person, according to Cal Fire. The situations surrounding the person’s death were unclear.
1:24 p. m. How did Glass Fire begin ?: Cal Fire officers, Glass Fire began Sunday on the two hundred block of North Fork Crystal Springs Road, near Silverado Trail, east of Larkmead Lane. The cause is unfirmed. The smaller Shady Fire, one of the two that merged with Glass Fire on Monday, allegedly jammed the chimney due to the wind that threw sparks or embers from the Glass Fire, but that’s also unconfirmed, authorities said. Read the story.
12:47 p. m. Place of glass fireplace lamp on fire near Robert Louis Stevenson State Park: Cal Fire reported that the glass fireplace lamp site is now burning in palisades adjacent to Robert Louis Stevenson State Park in Napa County. ravaging a mountain, its raging clouds temporarily swell over the ridge.
11:47 am Place of glass for fireplace that threatens 22,500 structures: The glass place for fireplace destroyed 80 houses, but 22,500 structures are still under threat, Cal Fire said Wednesday. winds can simply check the containment lines.
11:35 am Red flag fire warning for Thursday: The National Weather Service has issued a hazard warning instead of red flag lamp for the North Bay Mountains and the spaces around the glass fireplace at the birthplace at 1pm on Thursday Without expecting the same critical situations instead of lamp as in At the birth of the week , meteorologists expect incredibly dry and windy situations in the region.
11:25 Refusal to evacuate to save a building: when the grass chimney fell over the Pope’s Valley and evacuations were ordered, a citizens’ organization refused to leave, remaining in the 1915 Pope’s Valley garage that they said had never closed. Doors. Read The Chronicle’s story about how they rationalized the firefighters’ challenge and the insistence of law enforcement officials that such movements are harmful and endanger the lives of citizens and firefighters.
11:17 a. m. on Thursday will bring winds and heat to the Bay Area, as the Bay Area is about to be hit by dry, grated winds and warm temperatures on Thursday, meteorologists said. in the North Bay Mountains, creating situations that can extend the glass fireplace and continue over the weekend. Unusually high temperatures are expected on Thursday, reaching more than a hundred in North Bay and other areas of the interior. Read the story here.
10:59 Evacuations at the site of the new glass fireplace: The place of the glass lamp in the fireplace is forcing additional evacuations even when other people return to the house. People living northwest of Calistoga were ordered to evacuate early Wednesday morning. of the Skyhawk community in East Santa Rosa were allowed to return home on Tuesday night and some evacuation orders were reduced to warnings. Read the latest main points here.
10:47 am Firefighters are forced to use a shelter: two firefighters in a fire location, trapped through the flames of the wind, were to escape the wounds after deploying their shelter at the fire site, Cal Fire officials said Wednesday. Store-shaped design around 11:45 pm on Sunday. They were not injured, Cal Fire reported, however, several shipping cars located in chimney locations broke through the flames.
9:19 am Bay Area Firefighters in the Fury of the Chimney: Alameda County Fire Department tweeted that its crews and East Bay crews helped structures and livestock in the Calistoga-St area. The Helena, “passing the genuine chimney” in direction and “confronted with weather and fireplaces “The branch released a dramatic video of the fury they saw.
8:53 am How global warming and fires converged: The Chronicle created interesting interactive maps showing how the climate crisis has become uncontrollable, over-droughtd, covered with reduced trees, torrential rains that fed the undergrowth and warm climate forces to light record forest fires in recent years. Check out the compelling map mapping here.
7:57 am The place of the glass fireplace continues to spread: in warm, dry conditions, the place of the glass fireplace burning in Sonoma and Napa counties higher across approximately 2,000 acres overnight. It fed on 48,440 acres and 2% contained Wednesday morning, Cal Fire reported. 115 structures, 80 houses and several wine buildings have been destroyed and more than 22,000 are threatened.
7:35 am Fire Zogg 7% contained but growing: firefighters began building containment lines wednesday night at zogg chimney, which burns in grass, oak and chapparal west of Redding in Shasta and Tehama counties. 51,955 acres, 7% contained Wednesday morning after 0% contention on Tuesday night. The chimney near the cities of Ono and Igo destroyed 146 structures.
7:14 am Diablo’s winds are lurking, with the prospect of worse fires: the ferocious fires that have devastated Northern California in recent weeks can worsen exponentially as dry and seasonal gusts called Diablo winds begin in October, weather experts say. Like the Santa Ana winds in Southern California, they occur when the state is most vulnerable, Reports Aidin Vaziri of the Chronicle.
5:39 A video shows the devastation along the Sonoma-Napa border: Sonoma County Sheriff’s Office released a video Tuesday night of where a fireplace was located along the St. Louis Highway. Helena on the border of Napa and Sonoma counties. Charred landscapes in a domain that the sheriff’s workplace said was one of the most active areas of chimney spots in Sonoma County while the 46,600-acre chimney crystal spot was enraged.
5:24 am Air quality to bad grades for much of the Bay Area: a Spare the Air alert remained in effect Wednesday morning, with air quality considered “bad” for much of the Bay Area, with maximum levels of contaminants detected in the north and East Bay skiesArray according to the Bay Area Air Quality Management District. Areas south of the glass fire, from Petaluma, Vallejo and Concord to Livermore, are expected to delight in poor air quality during the week. would last at least on Friday.
5:10 a. m. Fire Situations Expected in Mountainous Napa, Sonoma Counties: Wind gusts are expected to reach up to 30 mph at higher elevations in the North Bay Mountains this week, which may cause more smokestacks in a Domain already besieged through a 46,600-acre glass chimney, according to the National Weather Service. Meteorologists are concerned about the prospect of strong winds related to low humidity. and continues Saturday night, although gusts of wind are expected to continue into the weekend.
Updates on Tuesday, September 29:
8:55 p. m. The Weather Service issues glass fire clocks, Dolan: The Bay Area National Weather Service Office has issued time clocks at the chimney site for the Glass and Dolan chimney cords, stating that, to come, “the weather is not as strong as the glassplaceplacelaceArray still critical with warm temperatures , low humidity, dry fuels and windy winds. The weather service has not yet asked for a red flag warning, which is one step above a weather alert instead of fire.
8:30 p. m. The weather service does not expect a red flag warning, however, the heat will be intense: the National Weather Service has said it does not aim to issue a red flag warning, but intense heat is reaching the fire site area. to float basically between the low and mid-1990s on Wednesday before jumping to more than a hundred degrees on Thursday, said David King, a weather weather meteorologist. Sonoma County officials said earlier that they believed it was possible to imagine a red flag warning at the chimney site. area in the coming days, with a Cal Fire Chief marking the score at 50-50, largely due to expected maximum temperatures and dangerously low humidity levels.
8:05 p. m. Newsom responds to Trump’s comments about wildfires: California Gov. Gavin Newsom retwented a tweet from PolitiFact verifying President Trump’s comments on the cause of the wildfires. In the first presidential debate Tuesday night, Trump said without evidence that wildfires were caused by poor forest management. , an independent fact-checker who is part of the Poynter Institute, tweeted: “Donald Trump attributes wildfires to forest management. False. California’s most powerful winds, higher temperatures, and drier weather replacement situations are also aggravating fires. “
7:15 p. m. Evacuation order issued for parts of Napa County by Glass Fire: Cal Fire said an earlier evacuation warning had been changed to an evacuation order for all spaces west of SR 29/128 (Foothill Boulevard) to the county boundary between Diamond Mountain Road and Petrified. Forest road.
7:10 p. m. Glass Fire reaches 46,600 acres: the Glass Fire burned 46,600 acres and contained 2% on Tuesday night, Cal Fire said. Authorities said 2,099 firefighters were fighting the fire, as well as 261 engines, 31 water trailers, 16 helicopters and 71 bulldozers.
5:32 p. m. Hood Mountain Park is back on the chimney site: The glass fireplace site has burned down almost all of Hood Mountain Regional Park east of Santa Rosa, according to Sonoma County Supervisor Susan Gorin. The park also caught fire at the 2017 nuns’ chimney site. Gorin warned that the picturesque landscape along Route 12 on the outskirts of Santa Rosa “will take a long time to recover. “
5:20 p. m. More road closures in and around Calistoga: Napa County Office of Emergency Services officials announced more road closures similar to the ongoing glass fire, including: Highway 29 on Tubbs Lane in all directions; Route 128 to Petrified Forest Road in all directions; Highway 29 to Deer Park Road in all directions.
5:13 p. m. The place of the glass fireplace is still at 0%, firefighters expect the weather to be worse: the place of the glass fireplace spans 42360 acres and 0% and has burned 113 buildings, authorities said at a Sonoma County press conference. Of those buildings, 28 were houses, in Sonoma County and 52 were houses in Napa County. Firefighters run to gain as much floor imaginable as they expect some other red flag warning amid three-digit temperatures, fast winds and low humidity. There are many things that can still burn, ” said Santa Rosa’s fire chief, Tony Gossner.
4:24 p. m. Three days later, Glass Fire is already wreaking more havoc on Napa’s wine industry than the 2017 fires: critic Esther Mobley has studied the damage to the domain and, so far, at least 12 wineries have suffered structural damage. In 2017, that figure, only six. This does not come with other possible disorders that will take time to reveal, such as smoke and water or long-term disorders of vine fitness.
3:57 p. m. A St. Helena hospital was evacuated twice in five weeks due to forest fires in California: the fast-growing glass fire, which broke out Sunday near St. Louis. Helena, forced the city’s only hospital to evacuate more than 50 patients by helicopter. and ambulance. It’s time in five weeks for Adventist Health St. Helena had to close and relocate all patients and staff due to invading flames. Read the full story here.
3:30 p. m. Meadowood homeowners say they will rebuild: a few hours after learning that their famous place to eat in Meadowood had completely emptied when the glass fireplace destroyed the property, the homeowners of the St. John’s complex. Helena are committed to rebuilding, according to a report by general manager David Pearson. Read the story here.
3:01 p. m. More than 80,000 evacuees in Napa counties, Sonoma: Authorities have ordered more than 80,000 people to leave their homes due to the danger of a glass fire spreading, including 35,556 in Santa Rosa, 33,870 in uninsinted Sonoma County and 10,917 in Napa County. according to emergency officials.
2:02 p. m. Strong winds and warm weather may return: strong winds and warmer-than-usual temperatures can return to the Bay Area from Wednesday night through Friday, the National Weather Service said Tuesday, but are expected to be less severe than last weekend. climate that triggered the three glass fires, flaming origin. Strong winds are likely to be limited to the mountains of North Bay and East Bay Hills. Temperatures can be successful in the mid-1980s in downtown San Francisco on Thursdays and Fridays.
1:40 p. m. The Sonoma County Sheriff recognizes “chimney fatigue”: Sonoma County Sheriff Mark Essick suggested citizens on a media notice Tuesday to pay attention to evacuation orders despite “fatigue at the chimney site. “”Nice place to stay” We arrived on the date of the 3 years of the Tubbs lamp lamp and this is the fourth main chimney lamp spot in our county since 2017,” he said, urging citizens to remain vigilant and be prepared to evacuate if ordered. The place of the fireplace is still unpredictable. You’re excited and in a position to go.
12:36 p. m. Al minus two other Spring Mountain wineries were broken: Spring Mountain Vineyard, known in part as the site of the 1980s tragedy “Falcon Crest”, severely broke its vineyards. Sherwin’s circle of relative vineyards, created through Steve and Linda Sherwin in 1996, also burned.
12:30 p. m. Temporarily repaired Internet in Calistoga: A Comcast official showed that the company, in cooperation with public safety, had worked “overnight” to temporarily repair the Internet in Calistoga’s domain on Tuesday morning. However, residents were ordered to evacuate.
12:23 p. m. Se have discovered missing persons in Glass Fire: Cal Fire officials said Tuesday that their number one priority to keep the 42,560-acre glass fireplace away from densely populated spaces around Santa Rosa and the Pope’s Valley. Santa Rosa police chief Rainer Navarro said at a press conference.
11:39 Burgess Cellars, 140, destroyed: Carlton McCoy, CEO of Burgess Cellars, showed Tuesday that a forest chimney had demolished the original Burgess Cellars winery and a barrel storage space. The tasting room and space remain intact.
11:30 am Glass Fire “unpredictable and fast”: Cal Fire officials said Tuesday that they had divided the 42,000-acre Glass Fire into two control areas. East Zone teams established lines around Angwin in Napa County, and while Angwin escaped damage, the Flames caused significant damage to Deer Park. The chimney site was active in the corridor of Highway 12 and Sugarloaf Ridge State Park in the western area on Tuesday. Sonoma County Sheriff Mark Essick suggested citizens attach to evacuation orders, calling the chimney site “unpredictable and fast. “
11:19 Closed Whiskeytown National Recreation Area: The south side of the Whiskeytown National Recreation Area is closed due to the proximity of the burning Zogg Fireplace site in Shasta County. Closure includes Brandy Creek Beach, Campground and Marina; and campsites and trails along Paige Bar Road and South Shore Drive. Aquatic recreation is prohibited, while chimney fighter jets extract water from the lake. Cal Fire maps show locations of wildfires in some of the same spaces that the 2018 Carr fire set on fire at the site of 42,000-acre recreation domain west of Redding.
11:08 am New evacuation orders are issued in Napa County: Napa County Sheriff and Cal Fire officials have extended a mandatory evacuation order for all citizens of Angwin, as well as for Americans south of Chile-Pope Valley Road, east of Ink Grade Road and west of Pope Valley Cross Road. The ordinance cites an “immediate risk to life” and says it is closed to public access.
10:57 Rombauer Vineyards is despite rumors: the Rombauer Vineyards in Calistoga was close to vineyards such as Chateau Boswell, which suffered significant damage with the glass fireplace, which generated questions and rumors about its disappearance. But Rombauer’s structures are and his Chardonnay was harvested long before the chimneys started this harvest season, the company said.
10:50 a. m. August’s massive community increases dramatically: fires in the August complex have increased to more than 60,000 acres by more than 24 hours as the record fire spread to 938,044 acres, a Cal Fire spokesman said Tuesday morning. The swell was due to strong gusts of wind that brought the flames further to the areas of the north and west chimney site, near Ruth Lake in Trinity County and Covelo in Mendocino County, the spokesman said. The teams established strong lines of participation in the southern component of the complex, but worked to involve expansion into the northern component on Tuesday. The chimney site remained involved by 43%.
10:35 a. m. Napa restaurateurs surprised by the devastation of the glass fireplace: The glass fireplace has scenes too familiar to the food venue industry at Wine Country, such as the mid-meal evacuation of a dinner hosted by local owners to eat gourmet Single Thread at a Forestville winery Restaurants cancel reservations due to smoke and ash , and some are losing hope that 2020 will return to imaginable normality. Read the story here.
10:15 Metallica donates $250,000 for wildfire relief: Metallica announced that it has donated $250,000 to five forest fire relief budgets to its All Within My Hands Foundation. This is the fourth year in a row that the Bay Area rock band, which is sold in various ways, has donated to the California Community Foundation’s firefighting budget , the Oregon Community Foundation, the Santa Cruz County Community Foundation, the North Valley Community Foundation, and the Community Foundation of North Central Washington.
9:56 am The glass place for fireplace tripled in one day: pushed by strong winds on Monday, the glass place for fireplace destroyed 113 structures on Tuesday morning, adding houses and all or part of several iconic vineyards as they passed through Wine Country, Cal Fire reported. reached more than 42,000 acres on Tuesday morning.
9:49 Calistoga calms down: Calistoga calms down Tuesday morning with a small but active fireplace lit along Highway 128 and Silverado Trail, which borders the small town known for its dust baths and vineyards. Silverado Trail where you could see small patches of chimney space burning the ridge, avoiding near the vineyards.
9:45 am A fireplace is burning outdoors Redding: fatal wildfires that get out of control on Tuesday morning have burned outdoors Redding and Wine Country, with flames that also force evacuations in Paradise, spaces that have become uncomfortably familiar with primary chimneys in recent years. Read what’s new here.
9:35 A glass fireplace throws giant pieces of ash: Morgan Balaei, a Santa Rosa resident who once lived through forest chimneys in Sonoma County, was surprised to see the largest piece of ash I have ever noticed: “Probably the length of my face. “Glass Fire ashes are different, thicker and everywhere,” he says. Cal Fire says it is not known why the ash lengthens, in all likelihood debris from burning structures, pieces of bark or soft fuels from the grass. Read more.
9:19 Wine Country Fire Dispatches: on the fifth podcast
9:06 am The climate that fuels rapidly moving wildfires is shrinking a little: a minimum of winds grated overnight has allowed firefighters fighting 27 primary chimneys in California to continue building containment lines and protecting the design while responding to 19 new chimneys The US Forest Service has allowed firefighters fighting 27 primary chimneys in California to continue building containment lines and protecting the design while responding to 19 new chimneys The US Forest Service. The U. S. reported that the 31,000-acre lake chimney in Los Angeles County was completely contained, and a red flag warning was maintained for the mountains and indoor spaces of Riverside and San Diego counties until Tuesday night. A sea layer was expected in coastal spaces.
8:58 am The place of the glass lamp envelops 80 houses in Napa, Sonoma: The place of the glass lamp of the highest fireplace lamp through 6,324 acres overnight destroyed 42560 acres of Wine Country, said a spokesman for Cal Fire on Tuesday morning. 28 in Sonoma County. The count of lost ad homes as a result of the chimney lamp site not being complete, the spokesman said. Nearly 1,500 firefighters fought the fire on Tuesday, which remained at 0%.
8:45 am Napa County lifts water restriction: Napa County has given the soft green for drinking water in the NBRID-Berryessa Highlands water system, raising the “do not drink – do not boil” notice since early September. Water samples are now shown “there is no evidence of fire-related contamination in the water system. “The only exception is Clearwater Ct. , where additional evidence is needed, the government said.
8:15 am Burns from Beyond Don’t Protect Against New Chimneys: Experts say the ecological consequences of forest chimneys beyond could possibly have caused spaces like Napa and Sonoma to catch fire this year and, in a horrible cycle of destruction, the Existing chimneys can prepare the region for the more painful chimney seasons to come. They say that with climate change upon us, achieving a chimney-resistant landscape is not a realistic goal. Read The Chronicle’s story here.
8 am Retreat over St. Helena seriously damaged: Hoffman Institute, which administers the White Sulphur Springs retreat intended to heal emotionally in the wooded hills above St. Helena, “suffered enormous damage” due to glass fire, said the institute’s website. Despite the damage, “our paintings to help others in their lives through the healing force of love continue,” he says.
7:30 am The wineries are affected: as the glass fireplace passed through giant rows north of the Napa Valley, it destroyed several wineries, adding the 120-year-old Tofanelli family barn and vineyard in Calistoga and the stone cellar of Boswell Castle. At least 143 Napa County wineries were in evacuation areas, emergency officials said, and many owners were waiting to see how their vineyards performed. Read the story here.
6 am 50. La Deadly Zogg Fire domain grows overnight: the Zogg Fire has expanded more than 9,000 acres overnight, wrapping 40,317 acres of Shasta County on Tuesday morning, according to an update from Cal Fire. Firefighters aim to protect the 1,538 structures recently threatened through the immediate fire, Cal Fire said. The fire, which killed 3 people, still 0% contained on Tuesday morning.
6:22 am Coastal breezes, north winds to keep smoke at bay: The wind trend will likely keep smoke from the confined glass fireplace site in North Bay, and very little steaming air is expected to blow south toward the rest of the Bay Area, National Weather Service meteorologists said Tuesday morning. Indoor temperatures are forecast to range from 90 to 100 degrees, while San Francisco will stay cooler at a maximum of 72 degrees on Tuesday. ocean breezes, as the flames remain above the sea layer in dry air and low humidity spaces at night, meteorologists said.
5:56 am Evacuations are still in effect for the chimneys of the August complex: fire crews and excavators worked to involve the northern dominance of the August 902463 acre complex as wind gusts continued to push the flames west on Monday, according to a video posted through Shasta. -Trinity National Forest on Facebook early Tuesday morning. The images showed pain in the forest as the chimney headed toward Trinity County, where a dozen communities won evacuation orders, according to Cal Fire.
5:29 am Air quality to bad grades for much of the Bay Area: a Spare the Air alert remained in effect Tuesday morning, and air quality was deemed “bad for sensitive groups” in much of the Bay Area, according to Bay Area Air Quality District Management. All of North Bay, Vallejo and San Rafael, it has been classified as “unhealthy” due to contaminants from glass fireplaces that plague 36,236 acres in Napa County. Air quality regulators said a Spare the Air alert would last at least Friday.
5:18 a. m. : A time-lapse video shows the Glass Fire tearing apart the Napa Vineyard Valley: The Bay Area National Weather Service tweeted a dramatic video of Glass Fire’s immediate ascent along the mountainous border of Napa and Sonoma counties Monday night. from a PG camera
4:41 a. m. Bird’s eye view of a fire: A Cal Fire helicopter has captured a video of a hot spot northwest of Angwin in northern Napa County, where the glass fireplace has gobbled up 36,236 acres since it started about 48 hours ago. for Angwin and the proximity to the city of Calistoga, where the flames spread on Monday night.
2:17 am Very bad air near Sonoma: The air quality just northwest of the city of Sonoma was very poor early Tuesday, according to PurpleAir. PM2. 5 readings, measuring hazardous components, exceeded 300 in some areas. The east component of Santa Rosa looked bad, while San Francisco and much of the East Bay had intelligent air quality. See a live map of air quality here.
12:55 p. m. A damaged force line reported near Santa Rosa: Traffic from the Cal Fire scanner reported a damaged power line on Calistoga Road and Rincon Avenue, just outside the city limits of Santa Rosa. Cal Fire asks PG
Updates on Monday, September 28:
10:55 p. m. The governor claims a state of emergency: Gov. Gavin Newsom has claimed a state of emergency in Napa, Sonoma and Shasta counties. He also called on President Trump to claim a “major disaster” that would send aid grants for the place of fires in the state. Complaints occur when Zogg’s fire lamp site in Shasta County killed 3 other people and burned more than 31,000 acres.
9:23 p. m. Why do chimneys seem to expand at night?There is no one-way pattern, however, several points can cause a forest chimney to spread at night, adding moisture and wind direction. Chronicle’s Kellie Hwang explains what you want to know about those fast-growing chimneys.
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9 p. m. The August community spans more than 900,000 acres: the August community, already the largest wildfire in California history, grew to 902,463 acres Monday night, Cal Fire reported on its website. The fires, which have been burning for 42 days and now span seven counties. , have been reduced to 45%.
8:15 p. m. Santa Rosa city schools cancel all online categories through Wednesday: Due to ongoing evacuations and wildfire threats, Santa Rosa city schools announced Monday that they will cancel all online categories on Tuesday and Wednesday. he says
8:05 p. m. Zogg Fire doubles in a matter of hours: the Zogg Fire in Shasta County exploded Monday at 31,237 acres, according to a message posted on the Cal Fire Shasta-Trinity unit’s Twitter account. The latest update to Cal Fire at four p. m. said the chimney 15,000 acres and 0% contained. It still does not contain, according to the tweet of the Cal Fire unit, with 3 dead and 1 four 6 structures destroyed.
20:00 The people of Santa Rosa tell citizens to conserve water in the event of a threat at a fire site: The citizens of Santa Rosa were suggested to conserve water on Monday night as firefighters battle the fast glass fireplace site in Napa County. alert on Twitter, saying that water conservation would help reduce demand on the city’s network and ensure more water is available for “critical drinking and firefighting needs. “
7:54 p. m. Glass Fire destroys 113 structures: Cal Fire said the Glass Fire destroyed 113 structures, wounded two others, and threatened another 8543. Many noted that Napa Valley wineries lost buildings because of the flames and the place to eat The Meadowood caught fire. Chronicle of the damage caused to date by the wildfire.
6:53 p. m. All Calistoga in mandatory evacuation order: Napa County issued a mandatory evacuation order for Calistoga on Monday night, as the glass fireplace threatened the city. There were no injuries within the city limits on Monday night, however, there were significant injuries outside the city, Calistoga officials said. The city has about 5,000 inhabitants. Open evacuation routes come with Route 29 South and North, as well as Route 128 North. An evacuation center is open at Crosswalk Church at 2590 First Street, Napa.
Scene from 6. 50pm at Sky Hawk in Santa Rosa on Monday: When the glass fireplace site threatened his Sky Hawk home on Sunday, Joe Burroughs broke his space with a hose he bought after wine country chimney venues in 2017. He also helped his new neighbor, who had just moved into the community a few weeks ago, to rain his blue-walled space, which had a beautiful wooden door. But in mid-afternoon, the glass place of the fireplace jumped over the hill across the road and forced many community citizens to flee. On Monday afternoon, burroughs’ new neighbor’s space at Mountain Hawk Dr. was a half-burnt shipwreck. Some firefighters watered the smoking space, while others rested on the lawn earlier after an intense night protecting the street. Four other houses in Mountain Hawk Dr. were also devastated. Burrough’s space was left intact.
5:56 p. m. The Cal Fire official said Glass Fire’s progress was greatly reduced to weather situations: Ben Nichols, Cal Fire manager, said the weather would repair or break firefighters’ ability to involve the place of the glass fireplace that stretches in Napa County. enhance until the end of the week.
5:42 p. m. An official confirms when Glass Fire arrived in Santa Rosa: Cal’s fire chief Ben Nichols told reporters at a news convention Monday that the glass fireplace reached the city limits of Santa Rosa around 1:30 a. m. near Oakmont.
5:41 p. m. The building that houses meadowood’s famous dining spot was engulfed in flames: the three-Michelin-star dining spot, a component of the luxurious Meadowood resort, was noticed in the fireplace on social media on Monday. nationally with the place to eat, where he began cooking in 2008. https://www. sfchronicle. com/eating places / article / Napa-destination-Meadowood-hotel-building-shown-15604288. php
5:18 p. m. Glass Fire burns more than 36,000 acres: Ben Nichols, a head of the Cal Fire Department, showed at a Sonoma County news convention that the Glass Fire had burned 36,236 acres and is 0% contained.
5:08 p. m. Marin County Confirms New Chimney: Marin County officials have shown that there is another chimney along Highway 101 near Gnoss Field, affecting visibility and slowing traffic. Officials warn you to avoid the area.
4:47 p. m. Forest fires have burned more than 3. 75 million acres this year: the latest figures for Cal Fire and the US Forest Service. But it’s not the first time They show that California wildfires have burned more than 3. 75 million acres of land, and the Glass and Zogg fires remain 0% contained.
4:30 p. m. Scene at Hunnicutt Winery on Silverado Trail: Chronicle Reporter Chase DiFeliciantonio writes: At least one Hunnicutt construction had been absolutely burned, a charred and mutilated bathroom one of the few recognizable elements left where the design once was. metal roof in the main basement. In particular, the chimney, which still smoked in some places, had burned enough to melt the stone and concrete from a wall exposing the rebar underneath. The trees cracked and fell and the metal panels nailed to them had withered and melted. Across the road at Rombauer Vineyards, the chimney burned on an uncontrolled hill, sending thick smoke and pieces of ash into an already dark sky.
4:25 p. m. Comcast has yet to reestablish force in Calistoga: Comcast officials told The Chronicle that Internet access had not yet been restored in Calistoga because “we cannot safely enter the area” into the challenge. They did not know when the challenge would be. and it was not transparent whether other communities were also facing power outages related to Comcast fires.
4:19 p. m. Cal Fire Updates on Zogg Fire: Shasta County Sheriff Eric Magrini showed at a news convention that Zogg’s chimney started around 3 p. m. Magrini said 466 homes have been evacuated so far, affecting some 1,250 residents.
4:15 p. m. Three other people died in Zogg’s chimney: Shasta County Sheriff said the developing chimney in the county had killed three other people, according to KRCR 7 and other media outlets.
4:09 p. m. Several buildings in the vineyard of the Hourglass Winery were destroyed: the main vineyard and a 162-year-old guest house were lit in the glass fireplace, owner Jeff Smith showed after seeing photos of the Chronicle. Smith believed that the property’s underground caves, which contained all the wines of The Hourglass aged in barrels, had been saved.
4:03 p. m. Hotels in the Empty Bay Area are filling up as others flee Glass Fire: “Today, for the first time in months, we have full occupancy,” says a Napa Hotel employee, reflecting the immediate increase in demand. Rusty Simmons and Shwanika Narayan of The Chronicle have the story.
3:58 p. m. Santa Rosa Hospital cares for nine patients for situations similar to forest fires: Santa Rosa Memorial Hospital reports that it has treated nine patients “suffering situations similar to wildfires”, according to a press release. Two were treated for burns; one released and the other sent to a burn center.
3:52 p. m. Approximately 12 patients treated for respiratory disorders consistent with the domain hospital: Queen of the Valley, a San Jose campus in Napa, reported treating about 12 patients for “respiratory disorders similar to smoke inhalation and heat exhaustion. ” .
3:42 p. m. Across the state, another 66,000 people were evacuated; 1 death in Zogg’s chimney: More than 66,000 people were on order to evacuate forest fires in California on Monday afternoon, adding about 54,000 due to Glass and Shady chimneys in Napa and Sonoma counties, according to the California Governor’s Office of Emergency Services. were sent to more than 1,500 rooms in 143 secure hotels around the state. One user died in the Zogg chimney in Shasta County, and the fate of two has not been confirmed, emergency officials said.
3:35 p. m. Red Flag Situations Disrupt August Stacks Involvement in the North Complex – Hot, dry situations hampered chimney crews’ efforts to engage the August and North Complex stacks Monday, a Cal Fire spokesperson said . complex extended to Colusa County and confined to 45% on Monday afternoon; The 306,135 acre north complex is 78% confined. A red flag warning in effect for much of Northern California, from the Oregon border to San Jose and east to the foothills of the Sierra.
3:28 p. m. Se have lifted evacuation orders for the Pillsbury Lake area: evacuation orders have been reduced to warnings for citizens living south of the fire, north of North Ridge, West Crockett Camp, east of Lake and Mendocino County and west of Glenn County, Lake Announced the county sheriff.
3:23 p. m. Santa Rosa suffered a “significant loss”: Santa Rosa fire chief Tony Gossner said Monday that he did not have an exact figure of the number of structures claimed through the glass fireplace while burning the hills east of St. Helena overnight said there was a “loss” between Los Alamos Road and Oakmont Drive on the north side of Highway 12. Some buildings were also lost on Skyhawk and Calistoga roads and a construction in the Oakmont area.
3:01 p. m. Raceway turns out to be a sweltering refuge: Melanie Collins and Chris Rossow, a married couple from Oakmont, were the only two evacuated in the middle of a box in front of the Sonoma Raceway on Monday afternoon, where temperatures reached 90 degrees higher. with a non-existent shadow. But smoke from remote fires was not noticeed at the evacuation point. Rossow and Collins have only lived in California for about a year, but have already had to evacuate their home in Sonoma County twice. keep in mind moving somewhere else. ” The problems are really you,” he said. With a small tent on top of their red Mazda SUV, they planned to set it up for a few days.
2:45 p. m. Glass Fire threatens 8,500 structures in Napa counties, Sonoma: Glass Fire forced the evacuation of another 53,000 people and threatened 8,500 structures until Monday afternoon, through the highest fire position in the state, a Cal Fire spokesman said. Sonoma counties that fled the immediate fire position position have already been eliminated through the fire position position positions of the August LNU Lightning Complex. said the spokesman.
2:17 p. m. Newton Vineyard suffers significant damage to the fireplace: Newton Vineyard, owned by luxury conglomerate Mot Hennessy Louis Vuitton, “significantly impacted” through Glass Fire, showed on Monday CEO Jean-Baptiste Rivail. It did not provide additional points on the extent of the damage to St. Louis’ property. Helena, but noted, “Our garage facilities have not been affected, so all bottled crops remain intact. “
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1:29 p. m. A small old hat: many of the evacuees who took refuge Monday at the Sonoma-Marin Exhibition Park in Petaluma were not new to the exercise: a dozen cars parked on the lawn were overcrowded with clothes, pets and dirt mattresses, including camping chairs to rest. “We’ve never had anything like this before, until the Tubbs fire,” Jonathan Andre of Bennett Valley said. He said he, his wife and his pug, Zora, had evacuated four or five times before. On Monday morning alone the last time they had fled their homes, after waking up with evacuation notices on their phones.
1:22 p. m. Firefighters flames at Sterling Vineyards: Sterling Vineyards firefighters on Dunaweal Lane were cleaning just before noon after a fireplace exploded in a hillside design overlooking the property. prevent flames, according to Will Krings, battalion commander of the Fremont Fire Department.
1:16 p. m. ” Over and over again,” California has more than 18,000 firefighters attacking 27 wildfire complexes, Gov. Gavin Newsom said Monday. Fires sweeping North Bay, he said, are causing “a lot of dismay in and around this that has been hit many times. “
1:12 p. m. Aher Calistoga Vineyard destroyed: Brittany Hosea-Small, a photographer, captured a video at Fairwinds Estate Winery in which the property’s buildings appear to have been virtually level. You may contact a vineyard representative for comment.
1:05 p. m. Glass Fire Region in the past without touching through the fireplace: the brush burned in the glass fireplace was one of sonoma County’s last remaining spaces in the past untouched through forest chimneys. It is not known when the domain was last burned, said Santa Rosa fire chief Tony Gossner. “Although it was burning very temporarily because it hadn’t burned for a long, long time . . . It also burned in the scars of the Nun and the Tubbs and also burned well there because it had been filled with fuel such as grass and new weeds. Every year brings a new challenge.
1:01 p. m. Chimneys are melting in Glass Fire: Cal Fire says two small chimneys, Shady Fire and Boysen Fire, have merged and are the largest rapidly expanding glass fireplace that now burns in Napa and Sonoma counties.
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12:27 p. m. Santa Rosa road closures: According to police, closures come with all highway 12 lanes between Mission Boulevard and Pythian Road east from Drive east of Mission Boulevard and all roads east of Calistoga Road between Montecito Boulevard and Highway 12
12:25 p. m. Sonoma officials urge citizens to comply with evacuation orders: Sergeant Juan Valencia of the Sonoma County Sheriff’s Office said officers return to Los Alamos Rd on Sunday night to rescue those who refused to evacuate their homes. When citizens get a Nixle alert or a knock on the police door and hear the siren very low, “it’s time to go,” Valencia said.
12:20 p. m. Several parts of Santa Rosa remain under threat, and Sonoma County chimney officials say they are heavily involved in protecting the spaces surrounding Calistoga Road, Oakmont Drive and Annadel State Park in Santa Rosa. At the same time, tony Gossner, Santa Rosa’s fire chief, said, “there are many demanding situations of the day. “
12:10 p. m. More than 140 warehouses in Napa County evacuation zones: County emergency branch officials told the Chronicle that 143 warehouses are in evacuation zones, which have spaces subject to mandatory orders and warnings.
12:05 Cleaning sterling Vineyards firefighters: A hill fire has begun overlooking the assets near Calistoga. Firefighters used saws and hand equipment to rip out the pieces of wall covering and prevent the flames, according to Will Krings, commander of the Krings battalion said firefighters were on the scene the day before spraying embers on one of the basement ceilings. He said strong braised winds probably stoked the flames in the assets.
11:58 p. m. Flames on Schramsberg Vineyards assets: Cal Fire reacts, according to scanner traffic. The vineyard is on the west side of Highway 128 between Calistoga and St. Helena.
11:44 Evacuation of Brasswood Cellars: Scanner traffic reported that the basement was being evacuated, there was no immediate threat.
11:38 am Santa Rosa officials are still assessing the damage: Santa Rosa fire chief Tony Gossner said he did not know how many structures had been lost in the fires that Sunday night, but described a “significant loss” between Los Alamos Rd. And Oakmont Drive on the north side of Highway 12.
11:34 a. m. Smoke from wildfires triggers a multi-day Save the Air alert: a Save the Air alert issued at least Friday for the Bay Area as smoke from fires burning in Wine Country moves south. See The Chronicle’s air quality map here.
11. 33 am Barn of 120 years in a destroyed vineyard: the barn of 120 years and the historic space of the Tofanelli vineyard in Calistoga have been lost, as have the stone cellar of the exclusive Chateau Boswell estate, which has been there for more than 40 years. Read the full story here.
11:11 New evacuation warnings in Santa Rosa: Warnings come with spaces east of Farmers Lane, north of Hoen Ave, west of Summerfield Rd and south of Highway 12, adding spaces west of Mission and Drive between Highway 12 and Summerfield Road; and the perimeter west of Summerfield Road and north of the city boundary (southern end of Bennett Valley Golf Course), south of Hoen Avenue, east of Cypress Way, east of Creekside Road to Yulupa Avenue and east of Yulupa Avenue, between Tachevah Drive to the south city boundary; and spaces within the perimeter north of Bennett Valley Road, west of Yulupa Avenue and south of Tachevah Drive). For more points and main instructions, click here.
11:01 am ‘I’ve never noticed anything like this’: Manny Gomes of Napa, detained in his van on Silverado Trail in front of a vineyard, waited to head north to see his small wine estate and animals, however, obstacles and a thick wall of smoke and intimidating ash: “I had never noticed anything like this” in 65 years living in the domain Said. Rally Garcia saw firefighters cross a two-lane road pushing back the hot spots that threaten a vineyard. Garcia said he had just returned home to the Coffey Park domain of Santa Rosa, destroyed by a wildfire three years ago, and had to be evacuated again.
10:50 a. m. Thousands of others without force at the preventive and chimney-extinguishing stops: in addition to the chimney cuts of Sonoma and Napa counties due to damage to electrical equipment, PG
10:27 00 p. m. PG outages
10:13 am Sonoma Raceway opens 50-acre camp for evacuees: Sonoma Raceway has opened its 50-acre camp for evacuees seeking refuge from wildfires. The site, which can accommodate up to 2,000 campers on weekends, must have motorhomes and motorhomes, facing the road traffic track 121, on-site coronavirus protection protocols, with face blankets and social distance.
9:30 am Some citizens of Calistoga will have to evacuate: residents of the domain south of Lincoln Avenue in Calistoga will have to evacuate immediately, Cal Fire said Monday morning. The rest of the city is under an evacuation warning. Residents do not use the Petrified Forest. Road to leave the domain. Highway 29 is open in Lake and Napa County. Highway 128 is open to Sonoma County, Cal Fire said.
9:11 am The farm of the castle vineyard destroyed: one of the main buildings of Castello di Amorosa, a popular tourist destination in the Napa Valley, was burned by the flames of the Glass Fire, which includes the Shady Fire, Vice President Jim Sullivan said on Monday. The devastated farmhouse contained all the bottled wine, fermentation tanks and company offices, the design of the castle rivet assets was intact. It took more than a decade and $40 million for assets to build.
8:36 am: Sonoma County Sheriff’s Evacuations ordered for Annadel State Park: Sonoma County Sheriff’s Office has extended evacuation orders as firefighters wage several fires on los Alamos and Santa Elena roads. The order includes the entire Annadel National Park (and the domain south of the park), the spaces to the east and south of the city limits of Santa Rosa, north of Bennett Valley Road and west of Savannah Trail. Residents are leaving now, police said.
8:26 am Firefighters issue larger evacuation orders in Napa County: Napa County officials have ordered evacuations on the east side of Silverado Trail, between Taplin Road and Sage Canyon Road and Sage Canyon Road to the east to Chiles Pope Valley Road. passed under an evacuation warning. The reactants leave immediately, Cal Fire said early Monday.
8:05 am Scorching temperatures and smoked air are returning: air quality in the Bay Area deteriorated on Monday morning when smoke from several wildfires in Northern California, adding the new uncontrollable glass fireplace in St. Louis. Helena, you entered the domain. It was expected to stifle dominance and the government suggested others stay indoors. Shortly after 7 a. m. , much of San Francisco was considered unhealthy for sensitive groups. all groups, according to the PurpleAir website. Read the story here.
7:54 am “It is as if God has no sympathy,” says the supervisor, “I’m a little numb right now,” Sonoma County Supervisor Susan Gorin’s reaction as she left her evacuated home on Santa Rosa’s Oakmont network about 1 a. m. the citizens of Oakmont were ordered to leave. Gorin is rebuilding her Oakmont home shattered by the 2017 nuns’ fireplace while living in another space in the same neighborhood. “I find it surreal that we faced this in some of the same spaces that lost so many houses so traumatic just 3 years ago,” Gorin said. “It’s as if God has no sympathy or empathy for Sonoma County. “
7:40 am Santa Rosa Junior College is closed on Monday: Santa Rosa Junior College announced that it will be closed on Monday as chimney evacuations and power outages continue in North Bay All activities and courses, in addition to online courses, are canceled, the school said on Facebook. Students can find more information about www. santarosa. edu.
7:29 am Get noticed in Kenwood: At the Petaluma Veterans Building evacuation center, Brian Borgfeldt felt a sense of déjà vu when a fire site swept through North Bay. The 65-year-old Borgfeldt, his wife and two teenage daughters fled their Kenwood home around 3 a. m. with the fireplace “coming very close,” Borgfeldt said. “And it already looks like the buildings have caught fire, our neighbors and everything,” a terrifying practice session from 3 years ago, when Tubbs’ lamp spot took Borgfeldt out of his nearly 40-year-old and burned the maximum of the others on your street. “We were lucky,” this time, Borgfeldt said. The family, hoping for a repeat of that fortune, packed their bags at the first red flag this year when Karen Borgfeldt, Brian’s wife, said Karen Borgfeldt, Brian’s wife. “All our valuables are moved to their place,” he said. Once we say that, we won’t postpone it until November. “
6:55 am Santa Rosa extends evacuation orders: Santa Rosa officials have ordered mandatory evacuations at Summerfield and Spring Lake spaces. In Summerfield, this includes spaces east of Summerfield Road, south of Stonehedge Drive and north and west of the city boundary (Annadel State Park), said the Santa Rosa Police Department. Evacuations at Spring Lake come with dominance north of Stonehedge Avenue, east of Summerfield Road, west of Violetti Road (east look of Spring Lake) , south of Highway 12 (between Mission Boulevard and Calistoga Road) and south of Road (between the southern end of Calistoga Road on Channel Drive). Candidates deserve to leave without delay and head south, police said.
6:44 a. m. The place of the glass fireplace reaches 11,000 acres: the place of the fireplace that started early on Sunday morning near St. Helena in Deer Park exploded at 11,000 acres and is below zero, according to Cal Fire.
6:06 a. m. Evasions ordered in Calistoga: “Mandatory evacuation ordered for the village of Calistoga south of Lincoln Ave”, says an alert from Nixle from the village of Calistoga.
6:01 am Comcast’s Internet service in Calistoga was affected: Sunday’s glass fire “damaged Comcast’s network paintings, causing a service disruption for residential and advertising consumers in Calistoga. “Comcast said Sunday. Lately, the city has been the subject of an evacuation notice. Some citizens said they may simply not access the Internet due to disruption to social media.
5:58 am Ordered Evacuation in Santa Rosa: Mandatory evacuation orders have been issued in various parts of Santa Rosa, adding spaces east of Brush Creek Road, north and south of Montecito Boulevard west of Calistoga Road, east of Mission Blvd, north of Highway 12 and north of Badger RoadArray, which is south of the city line. “Go and head south!” He said the Santa Rosa Police Department order.
5:54 am Strong winds in North Bay Hills continue to cause fires: according to the National Weather Service, the North Bay Hills revel in wind gusts of 40 to 60 miles consistent with the hour at altitudes of more than 1500 feet, with “a very dry air mass” that has particularly reduced humidity. Winds are also strong in the hills of East Bay. Ground winds” should subside this afternoon, but the weather will remain warm and dry. A red flag warning expires at nine o’clock at night. “Monday.
5:43 am Warning evacuation for Calistoga: Residents of the city can leave if an order is given, according to an alert from Nixle. Evacuees avoid Silverado Trail and Petrified Forest Road, and use Highway 29 (north or south) or Highway 128 to Geyserville instead.
5:24 New evacuation orders in Santa Rosa: orders implemented in the Northeast-2 and Northeast 3 / Middle Corner spaces, according to the Santa Rosa Police.
5:12 an immediate evacuation was ordered in Sonoma County when flames erupted in several locations: Sonoma County Sheriff’s Office ordered citizens near the Sonoma County and Napa line to evacuate after “multiple fires” broke out on Los Alamos Road and St. All citizens north of St. Helena Road, east of Calistoga Road and Petrified Forest Road and southwest of the Napa-Sonoma County border, were asked to leave their homes. “If you are in this area, evacuate calmly and temporarily now. “The sheriff’s order said, “Consult with your neighbors to make sure they are aware of this order if you have time. “
4:55 am Evacuation Order for Northern Bothe State Park: Napa County officials ordered a mandatory evacuation from North Bothe State Park to Diamond Mountain Road. Highway 29 is closed to traffic between Lincoln Ave and Deer Park Road. The center opened at Crosswalk Community Church, 2590 First Street, Napa. Evacuation warnings were also issued between Highway 29 and Silverado Trail from Dunaweal Lane to Lincoln Ave.
4:45 am Santa Rosa closes the evacuation point while another 11,300 people evacuate Sonoma County, sonoma county officials said about 11,300 more people were under evacuation orders in Santa Rosa and nearby un-incorporated spaces. The county closed an evacuation point it had established at the Santa Rosa Veterans Memorial Building and suggested evacuees move to the petaluma fairgrounds or the Sonoma circuit. County spokesman Paul Gullixson said the resolution came “as a precaution” as the flames threatened the northeast quadrant of Santa Rosa.
3:35 am Evacuation Order for Howell Mountain Road area: A mandatory evacuation order was announced at 3:12 am east of Howell Mountain Road from Crestmont Drive to Cold Springs Road, adding Las Posadas Road and Linda Falls Terrace, Napa County The domain had in the past been the subject of a warning. Residents were begged to evacuate through Pope Valley and not attempt to evacuate via Deer Park Road. The domain bordering Spring Mountain Road, Madrona Road, Spring Street and White Sulpher Springs Road has also received mandatory evacuation orders.
2:46 p. m. Firefighters fight the flames, detonate propane tanks in the Skyhawk community: In the Skyhawk community of Santa Rosa, the houses continued to burn down monday morning, with firefighters parked in the community, watering homes and spraying flames. listen to propane tanks explode several times. ” I just saw the flames rising above the ridge,” another officer said.
02:38 Skyhawk Network Fire: Houses burned on the giant Skyhawk network in east Santa Rosa early Monday morning and the fireplace had exploded on Highway 12 in Oakmont, where a giant network of elderly people evacuated by bus like flames rose near the hills.
2:37 am – Evacuation update for Sonoma County: in Sonoma County, flames forced mandatory evacuations to several neighborhoods east of Santa Rosa, adding the network of 4,500 elderly Oakmont residents, as well as surrounding spaces along Highway 12, the main road connecting the 2 a. m. , evacuation orders were extended south of Annadel National Park , on the boundary between Bennett Valley Road and Warm Springs Road to Savannah Trail, and in spaces around Sugarloaf Ridge State Park. Less than an hour later, the doleading around Glen Ellen ordered evacuation, as well as the doleading east of Highway 12 between Nuns Canyon Road and Trinity Road.
2:24 am Other evacuation orders issued east of Santa Rosa: Spaces are southwest of Highway 12, east and north of Warm Springs Road and northwest of Arnold Drive, northeast of Highway 12, southeast of Nuns Canyon Road/Nelligan Road, southwest of the Napa/Sonoma County line.
2:19 a. m. Update on Elders Evacuated from Oakmont: A Chronicle reporter followed a bus full of citizens of the Oakmont Village senior community in Santa Rosa as it left the facility to evacuate citizens before the Glass Fire charged Monday for the tomorrow. As the bus headed to safety, spot fires had already jumped more than a mile from a nearby ridge and ignited on both sides of Route 12. The bus continued without stopping, as winds threw embers onto the highway. The bus driver, who declined to give her name, said she had been called to help in an emergency. “It was just terrifying,” he said, describing how it felt like the branches were hitting the sides of the vehicle. “My boss drove through the fires of 2017 and it gave me courage. And of course God helped, ”said the driver. “I was so satisfied with the attendance. ” A total of five buses were used to evacuate citizens. Learn more about the evolution of wildfires in Northern California here.
1:01 Four spaces in Santa Rosa under evacuation warnings: see the maps included in this Tweet for more main points on evacuation zones and routes
These are the 4 neighborhoods of Santa Rosa that have lately warned of evacuation (from 12:30 p. m. ) and the recommended departure routes through @CityofSantaRosa pic. twitter. com/xGrUgabfGq
12:55 p. m. Seniors flee a chimney site in Santa Rosa: Buses have arrived from the city to evacuate citizens of Oakmont Village, a network of seniors in Santa Rosa. About 4,500 more people live there. Many don’t have a car. The chimney site is actively burning nearby. Here’s the video of the scene.
City buses take citizens of Oakmont Village, a network of seniors in Santa Rosa, where about 4,500 more people live. Many don’t have a car, the fire is actively burning eux. pic. twitter. com/Jj0N14Bqe3
More and more citizens are getting on the bus to evacuate and many are wearing pajamas. A woman dressed in a pic. twitter. com/U5RiwW4pXY
12:46 p. m. Residents fleeing East Santa Rosa: Lorraine Fuentez grabbed her elderly neighbor and suitcases and evacuated her from the park of her elderly’s cell home on Calistoga Road around 11:30 p. m. on Sunday. city gates. Fuentez was also evacuated in the Tubbs fire, which destroyed her daughter’s home in Santa Rosa. “We’ve gotten to the point that if it burns, well, ” said Fuentez. “Is abrumador. va to end someday?
12:41 p. m. 14,000 Santa Rosa PG customers
12:37 p. m. Kenwood ordered evacuation: authorities have prolonged evacuations east of Santa Rosa, asking more people in moon Valley to flee the flames. Evacuation orders are now in position for Kenwood and beyond on both sides of Route 12, bounded by Bennett Valley Road to the south and Nelligan Road and Nuns Canyon Road to the east. More data here.
12:35 p. m. Tower of flames, smoke columns seen in the hills near Santa Rosa: A long line of cars were noticed on the road in Santa Rosa late on Sunday night, moving away from Annadel National Park. About an hour later, at the intersection of Los Alamos Road and Sonoma Highway in Melita, you can notice an active chimney spot in the nearby hills. Massive flames and columns of smoke flew into the sky, and The sounds of the chimney site may be heard.
Updates for Sunday, September 27
11:20 p. m. Evacuations ordered in East Santa Rosa: Several neighborhoods east of Santa Rosa, adding Oakmont’s senior community, are now under mandatory evacuation orders. Many spaces in the Kenwood area, north and south of Highway 12, had already been notified of imaginable evacuations.
10:45 p. m. Paradise warned to evacuate: the entire city of Paradise in Butte County gained an evacuation warning as well as the nearby Magalia network, while Concow ordered evacuation when the north resort chimney resumed amid immediate winds. November 2018 campfire, the deadliest and most destructive wildfire in California history.
10:39 p. m. Evacuation warning east of Santa Rosa: Sonoma County sheriff’s office officers warned citizens east of Santa Rosa that immediate flames along los Alamos highway threatened them and that citizens in the domain would possibly have to evacuate. Kenwood, north and south of Highway 12. More main points here.
10:19 p. m. Calistoga Ranch Houses surrounded by flames: Traffic in fire scanners indicated that Calistoga Ranch development houses were surrounded. The spotlight fires also gave the impression on the vineyards along the Silverado Trail.
10:10 p. m. Glass Fire images show Chateau Boswell Vineyard in Napa Valley engulfed in flames: Chateau Boswell Vineyard in St. Louis. Helena lit the chimney on Sunday night as the Glass Fire continued to destroy Napa County. Photos taken Sunday by freelance photographer Justin Sullivan show the vineyard located on the Napa Silverado Trail, which survives through the flames. The extent of the damage is not without delay clarified. View the images and read the story here.
10:08 p. m. Chaos in Napa Valley: Fires broke out Sunday night on the west side of St. Helena after immediate evacuations by glass fireplaces on the east side of Silverado Trail before the day. Read the full story here.
22:02 Successful evacuation orders at the border of St. Helena: A mandatory evacuation was ordered near the border of St. Louis. Helena, while a warning was issued for the city of St. Helena. La mandatory evacuation order includes the 2900 block from White Sulpher Springs Road to the cul-de-sac and north of Spring Mountain Road, according to the Napa County Office of Emergency Services. It also includes 1650 South Whitehall Lane in the north to White Sulpher Springs Road, west to the county boundary The city of St. Helena, from Elmhurst Avenue to Madrona Avenue, west of Highway 29, is under an evacuation warning. There is an open evacuation center in Napa, Crosswalk Community Church, 2590 First St.