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Many homes likely lost in north central Colorado fires

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Boulder, colo.

Nearly 3,000 people were forced to flee from a fast-moving fire in north-central Colorado and authorities believe a large number of homes were destroyed.
The CalWood Fire started around noon Monday near the Cal-Wood Education Centre, which is about 17 miles (27 kilometres) from downtown Boulder. It was pushed by strong winds. The National Centre for Atmospheric Research’s Mesa lab recorded gusts of 59 mph (95 kph) on Monday.
More than 1,600 residences and nearly 3,000 people were under evacuation orders, including the small town of Jamestown, Boulder County officials said. Based on the path of the fire, officials believe it is likely that many homes were lost, Mike Wagner, the Boulder County sheriff’s division chief, said Sunday.
Wagner said damage assessment teams haven’t been able to get into the area to determine how many homes were lost. A news photographer for the Daily Camera later captured several images of what appeared to be burned homes.
Courtney Walsh was one of those who lost her home, she told The Denver Post.
She said she had about a 30-minute warning to gather up her children, animals and some belongings before sheriff’s deputies urged her to leave the house on Saturday afternoon.
“We were just waiting and waiting, and you know there is Twitter and live feeds,” she said Sunday. “Then we saw a picture from the National Weather Service, and it focused on our house burning. So then we knew.
“There were baby books that I didn’t grab, and I’m regretting it,” Walsh said Sunday, fighting tears. “Those are the one thing I always thought, ‘I have to grab those if anything happens,’ and I just didn’t. I froze.”
Shannon Kiss said smoke from the CalWood fire started seeping into her condo near Gunbarrel on Friday night, so she and her 14-year-old daughter taped up the doors and placed towels and blankets on the floor.
“We went outside and the ash was hitting our face,” she told The Associated Press on Sunday. “The wind was blowing and it felt almost like a windy rain, but it was ash hitting our face.”
On Saturday, they prepared to evacuate. “We saw the huge, billowing smoke coming from the foothills,” she said. “I’ve seen (fires) in the distance in the mountains, but never a populated area. Never this close.”
But by Saturday evening, it was clear the fire wouldn’t force them from their home. The fire had burned nearly 14 square miles (36 square kilometers) by Sunday morning, but more humid weather was expected to help fire crews.
“Everyone is thrilled with the weather this morning,” Jennifer Bray, spokesperson with the Boulder County Emergency Operations Center told The Denver Post on Sunday. “And hoping that will be a big help in their efforts today.”
The plan for Sunday was for aerial crews to hit the fire “as hard as they can” before winds picked up later in the day, Wagner said.
A fire that started Sunday on private property about 20 miles (32 kilometers) northwest of Boulder and grew to just over one-third of a square mile (1 square kilometer) led to the evacuation of at least 145 homes, including the small town of Ward, which has about 150 residents, Boulder County officials said.
Meanwhile, the Cameron Peak fire, which started in mid-August and is burning west of Fort Collins, has grown to 318 square miles (823 square kilometers) and was 62% contained on Sunday. More than 1,500 firefighters are working the blaze, which is the largest fire in Colorado history.—AP

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