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Rim Fire Raging In Yosemite Threatens Giant Sequoias, San Francisco Water, Power

GROVELAND (CBS/AP) -- As the 125,000-acre Rim Fire raged along the remote northwest edge of Yosemite National Park, officials were clearing brush and setting sprinklers to save two groves of giant sequoias.

The iconic trees can resist fire, but park spokesman Tom Medena said dry conditions and heavy brush are forcing fire officials to take extra precautions in the Tuolumne and Merced groves. About three dozen of the giant trees are affected.

The trees grow naturally only on the western slopes of the Sierra Nevada.

More than 5,500 homes were threatened and four were destroyed. Voluntary and mandatory evacuations have been ordered.

The fire held steady overnight at nearly 200 square miles, but a spokesman for the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection says firefighters didn't get their usual reprieve from cooler early morning temperatures Saturday.

"This morning we are starting to see fire activity pick up earlier than it has the last several days," said Cal Fire spokesman Daniel Berlant. "Typically, it doesn't really heat up until early afternoon. We could continue to see this fire burn very rapidly today."

The Rim Fire started in a remote canyon of the Stanislaus National Forest a week ago and is just 5 percent contained.

The fire has grown so large and is burning dry timber and brush with such ferocity that it has created its own weather pattern, making it difficult to predict in which direction it will move.

"As the smoke column builds up it breaks down and collapses inside of itself, sending downdrafts and gusts that can go in any direction," Berlant said. "There's a lot of potential for this one to continue to grow."

Meantime, the fire is still threatening power and water supplies to San Francisco about 200 miles to the west.

As of early Saturday, the fast-moving wildfire had burned just over 125,000 acres and remained largely unchecked with extreme terrain hampering efforts at containment.

The fire is burning toward the Hetch Hetchy reservoir, where San Francisco gets 85 percent of its water and power for municipal buildings, the international airport and San Francisco General Hospital. Governor Jerry Brown declared a state of emergency because of the threats.

Officials with the San Francisco Public Utilities Commission are running continuous tests on water quality in the reservoir that is the source of the city's famously pure water.

Deputy General Manager Michael Carlin told the Associated Press on Saturday that they fear ash could fall into the reservoir and cause a federal water quality violation. No problems were noted by Saturday morning.

Carlin said that ash is non-toxic, but it can create a cloudiness that would force the city to enact filtering contingency plans on water stored in reservoirs in the Bay Area.

"So far the fire is still two-to-three miles below O'Shaughnessy Dam," Carlin said. "We've had other fires in the watershed and have procedures in place."

The commission also shut two hydro-electric stations fed by water from the reservoir and cut power to more than 12 miles of lines. Carlin said they didn't know Saturday whether the lines were destroyed.

"The fire has passed through that area and we're trying to get back in today to see what damage has occurred to plan our restoration efforts," Carlin said.

Any power shortfalls are being made up through other resources or market purchases of electricity, and customers including San Francisco International Airport, San Francisco General Hospital, Muni and others will continue to be fully supplied, officials said.

San Francisco has spent around $600,000 on supplemental power purchases since Aug. 19 due to the fire, officials said. So far, there have been no blackouts.

After burning for nearly a week on the edges of Yosemite, the fire moved into the northwest boundary of the park Friday. The tourist mecca of Yosemite Valley, the part of the park known around the world for such sights as the Half Dome and El Capitan rock formations and waterfalls, remained open, clear of smoke and free from other signs of the fire that remained about 20 miles away.

Dry fuel and hot weather have combined already to make this the 16th largest fire in California's history. More than 2,600 firefighters and a half dozen aircraft are battling the blaze.

This has been a particularly busy fire season in California and throughout the West because a lack of winter rains and snow have left forests extremely dry. This year so far Cal Fire and the U.S. Department of Forestry have fought 5,700 fires, compared with 4,900 by this date last year.

While smoke is not present in Yosemite Valley, across the Sierra into neighboring Nevada smoke warnings have forced cancellation of some outdoor events.

Park spokeswoman Kari Cobb said that the park had stopped issuing backcountry permits to backpackers and had warned those who already had them to stay out of the area.

"Right now there are no closures, and no visitor services are being affected in the park," Cobb said. "We just have to take one day at a time."

But a four-mile stretch of State Route 120, one of three entrances into Yosemite on the west side remains closed because fire has burned on both sides. Two other western routes and an eastern route were open.

On Friday Officials issued voluntary evacuation advisories for two towns - Tuolumne City, population 1,800, and Ponderosa Hills, a community of several hundred - which are about five miles from the fire line, Forest Service spokesman Jerry Snyder said.

A mandatory evacuation order remained in effect for part of Pine Mountain Lake, a summer gated community a few miles from the fire.

More homes, businesses and hotels are threatened in nearby Groveland, a community of 600 about 5 miles from the fire and 25 miles from the entrance of Yosemite.

Usually filled with tourists, the streets are now swarming with firefighters, evacuees and news crews, said Doug Edwards, owner of Hotel Charlotte on Main Street.

"We usually book out six months solid with no vacancies and turn away 30-40 people a night. That's all changed," Edwards said. "All we're getting for the next three weeks is cancellations. It's a huge impact on the community in terms of revenue dollars."

The fire is raging in the same region where a 1987 blaze killed a firefighter, burned hundreds of thousands of acres and forced several thousand people out of their homes.

(Copyright 2013 by CBS San Francisco. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.)

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