Updated: Thursday, 24 Sep 2009, 3:14 AM PDT
Published : Tuesday, 22 Sep 2009, 11:56 AM PDT
Posted by: Dennis Lovelace, Scott Coppersmith
Moorpark (myFOXla.com) - This story has been updated with a new version - Guiberson Fire:
Day Three."
Click here to see the new version
of the story now.
Earlier Information:
Firefighters guarded rural homes, ranches and orchards Wednesday as a wind-driven wildfire apparently caused by spontaneous combustion in manure marched through rugged land between small Southern California communities Wednesday
The hot, dry and gusty Santa Ana winds that spread the flames across 15 square miles returned for a second day, and incident commander Robert Lewin said the fire had potential for significant growth.
The blaze, about 40 miles northwest of downtown Los Angeles, was
only 20 percent contained. Firefighters cut and burned away brush
along a canyon road to try to corral part of the fire's western
flank.
Fire officials said it began Tuesday in the area of an
agricultural mulch pile, but the cause remained under
investigation. The Sheriff's Department earlier said it was
apparently caused by spontaneous combustion in manure.
Winds and fuels such as grasses and light brush made the fire
dangerous, Lewin said.
"Our firefighters need to be on guard, make sure they're out
of harm's way when they're engaged in this fire, and so do the
citizens," he said.
About 1,000 homes were considered threatened as the fire
burned east and west just north of Moorpark, a city of 37,000. The
15,000-student Moorpark College was closed because of its proximity
to the fire.
Reverse 911 calls recommending evacuations were made to 2,200
phones in unincorporated areas, but officials couldn't say how many
people actually left.
One of those calls went to the home of school bus driver
Maria Kadowaki in Somis, west of Moorpark.
"I wasn't too frightened but my husband freaked out," she
said. "He ran outside and started watering the garage in the dark."
They chose not to leave their home, and Wednesday afternoon
she and another driver were out checking which roads would be open
or closed when they took children home after school.
Two outbuildings were destroyed but no homes had been
damaged.
The fire was also threatening agricultural properties, a
major concern in a county where the industry was valued at $1.6
billion last year.
"There are very, very valuable avocado groves and other
agricultural values out there and we are doing everything we can to
protect those," Lewin said.
Firefighters were also concerned about five major electrical
transmission lines, a 36-inch natural gas pipeline and oil
production fields within the fire perimeter, he said.
Firefighting costs surpassed $1 million as nearly 900
firefighters, 18 air tankers and 12 helicopters worked the blaze.
Four injuries were reported but all were minor.
The blaze was the largest of several fires that erupted in
Southern California on Tuesday as the Santa Anas blew in from the
northeast, pushing back the normal flow of cool and moist ocean
air.
During a calm period early Wednesday, Marieke Lexmond stood
with her dog Flynn and recalled the scary rush of fire and smoke
past her rented Balcom Canyon home.
"It was a serious wind and the fire came out of the hills and
it was burned out in 30 minutes," she said.
Lexmond and neighbors gathered horses into a corral in
preparation for evacuation.
"We have the cars packed and we are ready to go. When it
comes this close, you don't care. You take your passport and papers
and animals and go," Lexmond said.
An animal evacuation center at the county fairgrounds had 136
horses, three donkeys, three pigs, two goats and a lamb.