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Crews fear wind shift in fire near Myrtle Beach

Breezes fanning the wildfire near Myrtle Beach, S.C., were expected to shift Monday toward the southwest, potentially threatening an inland subdivision.
SC Wildfire
Smoke and fog blanket an area being worked by fire and forestry crews on Sunday in Conway, S.C.Mary Ann Chastain / AP
/ Source: The Associated Press

Breezes that stayed calm overnight remained light Sunday, but were expected to shift Monday toward the southwest. Through Sunday, the winds have mostly blown to the north, driving flames parallel to the coast. The shift could threaten an inland subdivision about six miles south of where most of the homes were destroyed.

"Sooner or later, these winds are gonna shift, then it's a whole different ballgame," forester Mike Ney told about 100 workers being briefed at the start of one 12-hour shift Sunday.

In all, the wildfire that started Wednesday has burned more than 30 square miles and demolished more than 70 homes. Officials said it remained 85 percent contained Sunday but worried an expected wind shift Monday could threaten other houses. Nobody has been injured.

Wayne Springs and Terry Cook tried to outrun the wildfire as it started ripping through forests and homes near the coast. The two state forestry technicians survived by huddling in portable fire shelters, and four days later they were still stomping out the blaze.

"I was nervous going back, but I didn't want to leave everybody else," Springs, 43, said Sunday. "I've never seen anything like this and I hope I never do again."

Springs and Cook were hours into battling the wildfire near North Myrtle Beach when their tractor got stuck on a fire break. They were waiting for a tow when the winds changed, pushing a 150-foot wall of flames at them.

"You knew it was coming for you, and that is a bad feeling," said Springs, of Lake City. "We were scared, but we stayed calm."

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Each took cover in a fire shelter — which looks like a massive piece of aluminum foil — and hunkered in a small ditch filled with water as the fire roared over them. For several minutes they were surrounded by the sounds of popping wood and the whoosh of flames.

"It wasn't long, but it felt like forever," said Cook, 43, of Florence County.

They and dozens of others were widening fire barriers and keeping watch on forecasts through the weekend.

Firefighters continued dousing hotspots and sifting through soil to prevent smoldering embers from blowing away and igniting pockets of greenery.

Firefighters also focused effort on hotspots in the far northeast corner of the scorched acres, near some swampy areas. More water drops by National Guard Black Hawk helicopters were planned, officials said.

Digging through the soil takes bulldozers several laps because the vegetation is so thick. So-called Carolina Bays that have helped fuel the blaze can be filled with brush and peat moss up to 5 feet deep, Ney said.

The firefighters' goal is to create a 60- to 100-foot border around the scorched acres as a safety zone.

Authorities said overnight humidity helped efforts, but smoke and fog delayed workers in the morning.

The long shifts were beginning to take a toll on some of the 500 people who have battled the blaze. Among them was Tommy Kelley, who normally operates equipment at a state forest near Sumter.

"I'm ready to go home and sleep in my own bed," he said.