California’s Deadliest Fire Is 100 Percent Contained; Focus Shifts To Larger Blaze In Mendocino County

Carr fire

California’s deadliest fire in 2018 has been 100 percent contained and the state’s largest fire is not far behind, according to state fire officials.

The Carr fire was sparked by a malfunctioning recreational trailer off Highway 299 in Shasta County on July 23 and scorched 229,651 acres, destroyed 1,079 homes and killed eight people, the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection said. The fire was 100 percent contained Thursday night.

“Although full containment has been achieved, firefighters will continue to patrol the fire area for several days and fire suppression repair remains ongoing,” Cal fire said in a statement.

At one point, more than 4,700 firefighters from the U.S. and abroad battled the blaze as it pushed west into Redding, north toward Shasta Lake and east toward Lewiston, officials said. The fire fed on drought-stricken trees, bone-dry grass and was fueled by triple-digit summer heat.

It is the sixth-largest fire in modern state history, according to Cal fire. This year it is also the deadliest so far.

After moving predictably in its first days, the Carr fire exploded on July 26 as it moved into Redding.

That day the fire killed four residents, a bulldozer operator and a Redding firefighter who was trying to help people flee the flames. In the days after, a Pacific Gas & Electric worker helping to restore power in the area died in an accident, followed by a second firefighter who died in a car crash.

Meanwhile, crews on Friday were wrapping up efforts to contain the Mendocino Complex fire, a pair of wildfires that broke out near each other in the Mendocino National Forest on July 27.

Considered a singular incident, the fire was 93 percent contained Friday and had scorched 459,102 acres, dwarfing all other fires in modern state history. For comparison’s sake, the second-largest fire in state history, the Thomas fire, which burned in Southern California last year, was 281,893 acres.

The Mendocino Complex fires have destroyed 157 homes structures and killed one firefighter. They are expected to be fully contained by Saturday, according to Cal fire.