Inferno
The blaze, dubbed the “Rocky Fire,” erupted in the inland area of the North Coast Ranges in California, about 110 miles (177 kilometers) north of San Francisco. It is the biggest of more than 20 wildfires currently raging across the drought-stricken state after thousands of lighting strikes hit in recent days.
‘Unprecedented’ speed
The blaze has scorched 62,000 acres (25,090 hectares), quadrupling in size within just a few days. On Saturday night, the fire burned through 20,000 acres in a single five-hour period. That’s an “unprecedented historical rate of spread,” according to Daniel Berlant, a spokesman for the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection.
Fighting the flames
More than 9,000 firefighters, many of them reinforcements from other states, are struggling to keep pace with the blaze. Strong winds on Monday night helped the fire jump a state highway that had served as a containment line.
Battle on all fronts
The fight to contain the blaze is being waged on the ground and in the air. Nineteen water-dropping helicopters and four airplane tankers have been deployed to dump water and flame retardant in an effort to stop the fire from growing.