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California wildfires: Flames push into farmland

Black smoke billows from an agricultural area near Cal State Channel Islands, in Camarillo.
(Francine Orr / Los Angeles Times)
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An ember from nearby flames started the fire at a storage facility that had some fertilizer inside at a farm in Camarillo a little after noon Wednesday, said Don Bowden, an employee who watched the flames engulf the building.

“It was a spark that came over the hill,” said Bowden, vice president of operations for the Oxnard district of the Reiter Affiliated Co.

Strawberries and raspberries are grown at the farm, which bumps up against the campus of Cal State Channel Islands.

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The university, whose hills were charred by the flames Wednesday afternoon, canceled classes Wednesday and will stay closed for the rest of the week, according to a posting on their website.

Around 2:30 p.m., arson investigators showed up at the farm.

Bowden said he didn’t think anyone had been injured by the fire at the facility, which stores plastic and fertilizer.

Julie Novak of the Ventura County Sheriff’s Department confirmed that a Hazmat team responded to an agricultural building Wednesday afternoon, but that by 4:30 p.m. they had determined there were “no hazardous materials.”

Officials also issued a smoke advisory for Lewis Road, Novak said, but she couldn’t confirm if it was the farm where Reiter Affiliated Co. grows crops, which is located on that road.

Ventura County fire spokesman Bill Nash said the fire was headed toward Sycamore Canyon as it crawled toward the coast.

“If we start to get that onshore breeze, it can slow down the fire and allow us to gain some ground on it,” Nash said. “Worst-case scenario: it pushes it further inland into areas that didn’t burn before.”

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Nash said the blaze has mostly burned through the newly grown vegetation that sprouts annually with routine fires and was moving deeper into the mountains, where plants and trees have gone unscathed for decades.

Firefighters’ best chance at gaining an advantage appeared to be overnight, when the temperatures drop and the winds die down, Seto said.

Four fixed-winged air tankers that were grounded Thursday afternoon because of wind and heat were expected to begin making drops in the evening.

A roughly nine-mile stretch of the Pacific Coast Highway was closed Thursday as the blaze moved toward the coast. The closure between Yerba Buena and Las Posas was lifted about 3 p.m., the California Highway Patrol said.

At one point, the Ventura County Fire Department sent 20 trucks to Cal State Channel Islands, where officials said flames charred the hills on the east part of campus.

By 1 p.m., dark smoke still billowed outside the window of Nancy Covarrubias Gill’s office, but the school spokeswoman said it looked a lot better than it did an hour earlier.

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“There’s a ton of smoke but no more flames that we can see,” she said.

The wind had died down a bit since earlier in the afternoon, when flames got close to a vacant building in the campus’ north quad, she said, adding that it wasn’t a structure fire because the buildings in the area are “solid concrete with tile roofs.”

“It could have been debris, it could have been a dumpster near the building,” she said. “But it wasn’t a structure.”

Although the university canceled classes for Thursday and Friday, Covarrubias Gill and about 30 others stuck around to “keep an eye on things.”

“We’re sitting tight,” she said. “To make sure embers don’t jump.”

Tom Mobley stared out at the billowing smoke as he stood above his company’s celery and bell pepper crops in Camarillo.

The 42-year-old food safety supervisor said Nunes Vegetables, which has about 1,000 acres off Las Posas Road, sent their day laborers home earlier in the day because there was too much smoke. In a nearby field, though, a couple dozen day laborers from a different company were still at work.

Mobley said it looked like the fire was threatening citrus and avocado trees belonging to other growers in the area. He watched as the wind blew black smoke west toward the Pacific — and away from his company’s fields.

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“Hopefully it keeps going that a-way,” Mobley said.

The hot temperatures, wind and dry conditions were posing a fire threat throughout the region. Los Angeles County firefighters responded to a blaze that broke out in the Calabasas area about 3 p.m.

Though winds were a relatively light 10 mph, more than 100 firefighters aided by four water-dropping helicopters responded to the scene near Meadow Creek Lane and Lost Hills Road, county fire officials said.


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ari.bloomekatz@latimes.com

Times staff writers Matt Stevens and Marisa Gerber contributed to this report.

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