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Friday, a fire
blazing through Montecito, California, home of the rich and famous, destroyed
a number of 111 residences, authorities notifying that even though the
wildfire had died down, the danger had not yet passed.
They informed that
another 1,500 homes were under the threat of burning down, because the fire was
not completely under control. Moreover, according to the California Department
of Forestry and Fire Protection, 1,800
acres had gone down in flames since the fire had broken out
on Thursday, at 6 p.m.
The Montecito enclave has drawn many celebrities over the
years, residents coming to call the land between the Pacific Ocean and the
mountains a paradise, since although exclusive and posh, it lies afar from the
humdrum of Los Angeles.
Among the stars who have sought coziness and peace in the
Montecito haven are iconic talk-show host Oprah Winfrey and famous actor Rob
Lowe, whose homes were both spared by the consuming flames Friday.
Nevertheless, some of their neighbours and friends, as well-were
less fortunate, having their properties defaced or even completely destroyed by
the wildfire. During Winfrey’s Friday show, she and Lowe talked over the phone
about the dreadful experience Montecito residents had been faced with, voicing
their sympathy towards their neighbours.
Oprah revealed that most of her friends whom she called to
see whether they were ok after the fire had left their homes only with their
dogs, the talk-show host adding that had her own estate been caught in the
fire, her main concern would have also been her dogs, since she didn’t have any
children.
As for Rob Lowe, he said he was watching football with his
son when the fire blazed around his home, his wife having been the one to notify
them of the impending danger just in the nick of time.
Wild fires in California spread to a second city on Saturday after ravaging hundreds of luxury homes the day before.
According to firefighters 5,000 people had to be
evacuated from the town of Sylmar just north of Los Angeles as bush
fires approached.
The fires were being driven strong winds, said Deputy Fire Chief
Don Fraser, adding that the fires was moving faster than a human could
run.
Around 1,000 homes were threatened by the flames in the Sylmar area, with 15 already engulfed.
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