Ga. Residents Flee As Wildfire Spreads
By RUSS BYNUM
WAYCROSS, Ga. – Dozens of residents were forced to evacuate and authorities closed a highway early Wednesday after a wildfire spreading through a swamp moved toward communities south of Waycross.
About 70 homes were being evacuated and a 35-mile stretch of U.S. 1 was closed to traffic, said Tracy Smith, a spokeswoman for the Georgia Emergency Management Agency.
The fire crossed state Route 177 and was threatening the small communities of Astoria and Braganza about three miles south of Waycross, Smith said.
Waycross, a city of 15,300, was not in immediate danger, she said, though heavy smoke covered the city. Wildfires have burned 53,000 acres, or about 67 square miles, of forest parched by drought in southeast Georgia in the past nine days.
Darryl Cribbs and his family left their Braganza home after sheriff’s deputies came to their door around 1 a.m. Wednesday. They piled spare clothes, a few valuables and their six dogs into three cars as the fire burned less than a mile from their house.
"It looked like it was snowing with all the ash falling. You could feel the heat," said Cribbs, 44, who took his family to stay with his parents. "They said as soon as we left they were going to bring in tanker trucks and try to save the house."
The wildfire spread rapidly Tuesday near the private, nonprofit Okefenokee Swamp Park, fueled by dense and dry trees and brush. It sent up a towering cloud of smoke near the entrance to the park.
Firefighters tried to slow the blaze by igniting underbrush ahead of it, hoping the fires would merge and burn each other out competing for fuel. They also hoped U.S. 1, the four-lane highway at the park entrance, would keep fire from spreading to nearby homes.
About a dozen residents who live within a mile of the park gathered Tuesday across the highway and nervously watched the orange glow from the fire behind the trees.
"I wasn’t scared last week, but this is scary," said Kelli Lee, 33, who said she has kept valuables packed for the past week in case she has to evacuate. "I know I won’t sleep tonight, that’s for sure."
The fire started April 16 when a downed power line ignited tinder-dry trees in Ware County. Officials said Tuesday the blaze was 50 percent contained by fire breaks plowed along its perimeter.
But winds have kept shifting direction over the past week, threatening to cause pockets of smoldering embers to flare back to life.
More than 1,000 Ware County residents have been forced to evacuate since the fire began, and 5,000 others have been urged to leave voluntarily because of health risks associated with heavy smoke.
The fire has destroyed 18 homes.
