View Full Version : Georgia wildfire still spreading
coldfront
04-23-2007, 12:28 AM
Georgia wildfire still spreading
WAYCROSS, Ga. Firefighters battling a wildfire in southeast Georgia are praying for rain.
The fire, which began Monday, is 30 percent contained, but is still growing. It burned another ten-thousand acres today, for a total of 55-thousand acres. That's 85 square miles.
A spokesman for the Georgia Forestry Commission says they've been able to lay a lot of firebreaks, but are dealing with the weather. A wind shift overnight drove smoke to Atlanta and Chattanooga, Tennessee.
The wildfire was apparently caused by a downed power line. It destroyed some 18 homes earlier this week.
dday05
04-23-2007, 01:36 PM
I saw that on the news this morning.Hopefully they can get it contained soon, and no firefighters get injured.
FirewmChelle
04-23-2007, 05:42 PM
We got crews there he;ping out from the Florida Division of Forestry. I think we will be sending even more soon least that what the FAS says. I'd be there if I could guys. My hearts with yall.
coldfront
04-27-2007, 09:33 AM
WAYCROSS, Georgia (AP) -- Wildfires flared up in drought-stricken southeast Georgia, destroying several buildings and forcing hundreds of fire-weary residents to leave their homes.
Deputies on Thursday visited about 100 homes in and near Astoria, a tiny community three miles southeast of Waycross, asking people to leave as a wildfire in the Okefenokee Swamp approached.
Most had just returned home after evacuating for several hours Wednesday. In the past 11 days, fires have blackened 95 square miles -- or about 61,100 acres -- of parched forest and swamp. Officials said 18 homes were destroyed. (Watch flames devour trees )
"My nerves just can't take it anymore," said Mary Howell, 51, as she packed stacks of framed family photos in the trunk of her Lincoln Towncar for the second time in two days. "I haven't slept in a week since this stuff started."
A fire outside Nahunta that firefighters contained last week began raging again Thursday, spreading about four miles along U.S. Highway 301, 911 dispatcher Elaine Wilson said.
Twenty-five to 30 homes were evacuated and three unoccupied buildings were destroyed, said Jerry Rohnert of the Bureau of Land Management.
Emergency officials closed 16 miles of U.S. Highway 1 and railroad tracks running alongside near the Okefenokee Swamp.
The wind blew hot embers from the swamp across the highway, igniting small spot fires near the Georgia Forestry Commission district office that fire officials had been using as a command center.
Firefighters contained the small fires quickly, but the command center had to be evacuated, said Eric Mosley, a spokesman for the Georgia Forestry Commission.
Meanwhile, firefighters used bulldozers to widen fire breaks plowed along both sides of U.S. 1, while airplanes sprayed fire-retardant foam to try to halt the blaze's advance.
About 1,000 people were forced to evacuate their homes near Waycross last week, and most have not been allowed to return. An additional 5,000 people were urged to voluntarily evacuate because of health risks posed by heavy smoke.
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