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Firefighters gaining control of wildfire that closed scenic California highway

Hundreds of people remained under evacuation orders as firefighters saw the blaze 35 percent contained by Sunday night, according to officials.
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Firefighters gained greater control on Sunday of a wildfire that closed northern California’s scenic coastal highway and threatened a famous bridge, although about 500 people stayed under evacuation orders, officials said.

The so-called Colorado Fire, about 15 miles south of Monterey and just north of the area known as Big Sur, broke out on Friday night and crossed the Pacific Coast Highway, burning for a time on the ocean side of the road.

The fire approached, but did not damage, the Bixby Creek Bridge, known for its spectacular concrete arch support that soars 260 feet over the gorge and Pacific Ocean below.

The fire was 35 percent contained on Sunday night, up from the morning’s figure of 25 percent, the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection said in an update.

The blaze was limited to about 700 acres, down from 1,050 acres in the morning, a revision it attributed to “accurate mapping.”

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Cal Fire said, “The fire behavior was moderate and made wind-driven runs late Saturday night and into Sunday morning,” adding that crew efforts to build and improve containment lines and mop up hotspots would continue on Sunday.

One structure, an occupied yurt, was destroyed, said Cal Fire spokesperson Cecile Juliette. Most of those under evacuation orders are believed to have left the area, she added.

Image: Colorado Fire burns near Big Sur
A Cal Fire water-dropping helicopter is pictured as the so-called Colorado Fire burns near Big Sur, Calif., on Jan. 22, 2022.Peter DaSilva / Reuters

Such fires are atypical for this time of year, as the Colorado Fire has scorched an area that went more than a decade without a January fire across more than 100 acres, Juliette said.

California has long had an active wildfire season, but it has grown longer and more punishing in recent years, fueled at least partly by climate change and a two-decade drought.

“We’ve had several fires across northern California in the last few years that have been different than the fires from 10 or 15 years ago,” Juliette said.

“They’ve been much bigger, (with) much more energy, much hotter and spread much more quickly. So this is the new California.”