Crews Gain Some Ground in Tehachapi Fire

"The wind has been a big factor. It's changing on us a lot''

By JACK NOYES, JONATHAN LLOYD and RAQUEL MARIA DILLON
Updated 10:19 AM PDT, Thu, Jul 29, 2010

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Calm, cool weather Thursday morning dampened the most destructive of two big wildfires that have burned dozens of homes and forced 2,300 people to evacuate mountain communities on the edge of the Mojave Desert and in the southern Sierra Nevada. But crews were prepared for afternoon winds that could kick up the flames again.

Firefighters from San Diego are in Kern County to help battle the monstrous fire.

Kern County Fire Information

A 1,400-acre blaze that burned 25 homes in the Old West Ranch community about 10 miles south of Tehachapi was 25 percent contained, according to the Kern County Fire Department. Some 150 homes in the loosely connected community remained threatened.

West Fire: Tuesday Night Update

West Fire: Tuesday Night Update
WATCH

West Fire: Tuesday Night Update

About 800 firefighters were attacking the blaze. Officials said Thursday the fire might be fully contained by Friday.

Lane Butchko, a retired resident without a car, ran a half-mile down a mountain road before a motorist picked him up.

"I grabbed my dog and we ran for our lives. I forgot my teeth," he said. "We were going at a full gallop and halfway down I fell, tripped on the dog's leash. When I got up, I felt the heat of the fire on my back and I saw a tree burst into flames."

At a Red Cross shelter for displaced residents set up at Jacobsen Middle School in Tehachapi, 22-year-old Sarah DeSmet, of Los Angeles, cuddled a dusty black kitten she had pulled out of the rubble, while her uncle, George Plesko, looked dazed.

"My uncle called my mom to say his final goodbyes'' because he didn't think he would get out alive," DeSmet said.

Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger declared state of emergency, freeing up state resources to battle the fires.

The cause of the fire is under investigation.

In northern Kern County, the Bull fire in Sequoia National Forest burned more than 15,000 acres. It earlier destroyed eight homes, six outbuildings and forced the evacuation of a camp for juvenile offenders near Kernville.

It was 5 percent contained.

Officials were investigating what caused the fires.

Click here for updates and information from the Kern County Fire Department.

First Published: Jul 29, 2010 10:19 AM PDT

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