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Massive wildfire erupts in California, blazing across 5,000 acres and sparking evacuations

2 months ago 12

By Ishita Srivastava For Dailymail.Com

Published: 20:27 BST, 6 July 2024 | Updated: 20:27 BST, 6 July 2024

Officials have issued evacuation warnings after a forest fire in Santa Barbara spread to nearly 5,000 acres in the span of a day. 

A wildfire, dubbed the Lake Fire, that erupted at around 3:45pm yesterday has left more than 300 acres of land charred in the Los Padres National Forest. 

The blazing Lake Fire had spread to about 4,673 acres before 11 pm, according to Los Padres officials. 

Pictures from the scene show red skies and trees on fire as firefighters run to control the situation. 

A wildfire that erupted at around 3.45pm yesterday has left over 300 acres of land charred in the Los Padres National Forest

Images from the aftermath also show giants plummets of smoke emerging from the forest as branches continue to burn into ash. 

The Santa Barbara County Sheriff’s Office has since issued evacuation orders for areas around Figueroa Mountain Road to the Forest Station to Chamberlin Ranch as well as areas north of Zaca Lake Road, east of Foxen Canyon Road and south of the Sisquoc River, according to the Santa Barbara Independent

Scott Safechuck, a Santa Barbara Fire Department spokesman, said temperatures had reached 90 degrees and relative humidity was nine percent in the fire area as of last night. 

Pictures from the scene show red skies and trees on fire as firefighters run to control the situation

The National Weather Service had also issued excessive heat warnings across the state till next week

Images from the aftermath also show giants plummets of smoke emerging from the forest as branches continue to burn into ash

'A large number of fire resources are on scene and responding to this rapidly developing wildfire. Firefighters are aggressively suppressing the fire. The communities and resources affected are a top priority,' the federal government's Incident Information System website read. 

The website further stated that the fire is a red flag warning 'due to extremely high temperatures and low relative humidities.'

The National Weather Service had also issued excessive heat warnings across the state till next week. 

The federal agency warned: 'An exceptionally dangerous situation continues to unfold during this potentially historic and deadly heat event. Several days of temperatures well above normal will lead to compounding effects among people and infrastructure with the possibility of numerous heat related fatalities. 

 Scott Safechuck, a Santa Barbara Fire Department spokesman, said temperatures had reached 90 degrees and relative humidity was nine percent in the fire area as of last night

'It cannot be stressed enough that while one day at these temperatures may be manageable for some, an event of this scale, magnitude, and longevity will likely rival anything we`ve seen in the last 18 years. 

'Heat is the number one weather related killer in the United States. It is VERY LIKELY that we add to hat statistic if preparations are not taken seriously.'

It went on to urge Californians to drink plenty of fluids, stay in an air-conditioned room, stay out of the sun and to check up on relatives and neighbors.

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