Sierra wildfire threatens 6000 homes

Flames from the Butte fire rise over a pasture in Mountain Ranch, California. Photo by Reuters
Flames from the Butte fire rise over a pasture in Mountain Ranch, California. Photo by Reuters

A relatively small but fast-moving wildfire in California's Sierra Nevada mountains grew overnight, destroying homes and threatening about 6000 residences.

The so-called Butte Fire has destroyed 15 homes in rural Amador and Calaveras counties, where it covers an estimated 26,195 hectares, California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection spokeswoman Lynn Tolmachoff said.

She said the fire grew overnight after officials initially overestimated the area of the blaze on Friday (local time).

Tolmachoff said she expects the tally of destroyed homes to grow as inspectors assess the damage on Saturday.

Residents in the area were required to evacuate on Friday.

"There are a lot of homes there, but they're spread pretty far and wide," she said.

About 3300 firefighters are working to contain the fire, which erupted on Wednesday and spread late on Friday near the former gold mining town of Jackson. Officials listed it has 10 percent contained on Saturday morning.

Governor Jerry Brown on Friday declared a state of emergency for Amador and Calaveras counties.

Separately, authorities ordered the entire community of San Andreas of more than 2700 people to evacuate on Friday, but lifted the order when flames headed away from town.

Flames from a larger Sierra Nevada blaze, dubbed the Rough Fire, edged close to a famed grove of giant sequoia trees in Kings Canyon National Park on Friday.

Ground crews mounted an all-out defense of Grant Grove, a stand of ancient redwoods that includes the General Grant tree, one of the largest and tallest of all giant sequoias, as flames crept within 1.6 km of the area, said Paul Garnier, a spokesman for the fire command.

Giant sequoias are naturally flame-resistant, and most of the area's trees show scars from past wildfires, though officials hoped to keep the latest blaze out of Grant Grove - a premier park attraction, Garnier said.

More than 2200 firefighters were on the front lines of the blaze.

Ranking as California's largest active fire, the Rough has scorched more than 48,000 hectares and forced evacuations of park staff and visitors from a large swath of Kings Canyon.

Containment was listed at 29 percent, though hundreds of homes in the park's vicinity have been evacuated, Garnier said. 

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