While wildfires are still burning powerfully in parts of northern California, some of the tens of thousands of evacuees are getting antsy to return to homes that are not under immediate threat. Others want to see if they still have homes to return to.
But authorities are staying cautious in the face of blazes that have now killed at least 40 people and destroyed at least 5,700 homes.
"We're on pins and needles," Travis Oglesby, who evacuated from his home in Santa Rosa, said to Sonoma county sheriff Robert Giordano yesterday. "We're hearing about looting."
Plans were in the works to reopen communities, but they were not ready to be put into effect, said Dave Teter, a deputy director with the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection.
Douglas and Marian Taylor stood outside their apartment complex yesterday in Santa Rosa with their two dogs and a sign that said "End evacuation now".
Their building was unharmed at the edge of the evacuation zone with a police barricade set up across the street. The couple said they are spending about USD 300 per day to rent a motel and eat out, and they want to return home because the fire does not appear to threaten their home.
Randy Chiado and his wife, Barbara, evacuated on Monday from the Oakmont section of Santa Rosa. They stayed for several days with a friend in Santa Rosa but left yesterday when flames approached again and sought refuge at the fair grounds.
"After so many times of 'It's coming, get ready. It's coming, get ready,' it just gets nerve-wracking," Barbara Chiado said.
Life away from home has been difficult and dangerous. Randy Chiado said a man who may have suspected he was a looter tried to punch him through his car window and yelled for a friend to get a gun when the Chiados turned onto a residential street.
Hundreds of people remain unaccounted for, though officials think they will locate most of them alive.
Most of the deceased are believed to have died late on October 8 or early October 9, when the fires exploded and took people by surprise in the dead of night. Most of the victims were elderly, though they ranged in age from 14 to 100.
"It's a horror that no one could have imagined," Governor Jerry Brown said, after driving past hundreds of "totally destroyed" homes with senators Dianne Feinstein and Kamala Harris.
Brown, 79, and Feinstein, 84, said the fires were the worst of their lifetimes. The two veteran politicians reminded people that the blazes remain a threat and that people need to leave their homes when told to go.
No causes have been determined for the fires, though power lines downed by winds are seen as a possibility. In all, 17 large fires still burned across the northern part of the state, with more than 10,000 firefighters attacking the flames using air tankers, helicopters and more than 1,000 fire engines.
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