Around half a million people in Oregon were ordered to evacuate on Friday and residents of its largest city, Portland, were told to be ready to go as extreme wind-driven wildfires scorched US West Coast states, causing at least 24 deaths.
About one hundred wildfires have burned an area nearly as large as the state of New Jersey across the US West, with Oregon bearing the brunt of the destruction.
Molalla, a community about 40 km south of downtown Portland, was an ash-covered ghost town after its more than 9,000 residents were told to evacuate, only 30 refusing to leave, the city's fire department said.
The logging town was on the front line of a vast evacuation area stretching north to within 4.8 km of downtown Portland.
About 10 percent of the state's population faced red "GO!" warnings to leave homes immediately, while hundreds of thousands more were under yellow "BE SET" warnings, to leave at a moment's notice, or green "BE READY" alerts.
Towns southeast of Portland were at the mercy of wind direction and strength after two of the state's largest wildfires merged into one in the Cascade mountains.
As winds dropped and moisture levels rose on Friday, firefighters launched drones into an apocalyptic yellowish smog to see how close the flames were.
"We don't know where the fire is," said Molalla Fire Department Lieutenant Mike Penunuri, staring into smoke in the town center which reduced visibility to one block.
In southern Oregon, a dystopian scene of burned residential subdivisions and trailer parks stretched for miles along Highway 99 south of Medford through Phoenix and Talent, one of the worst hit areas, according to a Reuters photographer at the scene.
Blazes jumped from wildfires burning through scrub and forest to suburban firestorms as flames leaped from house to house.
Oregon Department of Forestry fire chief Doug Grafe said he would need twice the 3,000 personnel he currently had to get a grip on around three dozen major blazes.
In neighboring Washington state to the north, online video from the Tacoma area showed fires starting in a residential area and setting homes ablaze, locals running from house to house to warn neighbors.
"Everybody out, everybody out!" a man screamed as firefighters tried to douse flames.
The death toll from the siege of West Coast fires that began in August jumped to 24 after seven people were found dead late Thursday in torched mountain communities around 85 miles (137 km) north of Sacramento, California, state fire authority Cal Fire reported.
Over 68,000 people were under evacuation orders in California where the largest fire in state history has burned over 299,470 hectares in the Mendocino National Forest around 190 km northwest of Sacramento.
"We had four hours to pack up our pets and a few medications and things like that," said retiree John Maylone from an evacuation center in Fresno, California, after he was forced to leave three of his 30 cats as he fled the massive Creek Fire.
Police opened a criminal arson investigation into the Oregon fire which destroyed much of Phoenix and Talent.
But at least four Oregon police departments warned of "fake" online messages appearing to be from law enforcement that blamed left-wing anti-fascists and right-wing Proud Boy activists for starting the fires.
Blazes in central Oregon also destroyed multiple communities in the Cascade mountains and torched areas of coastal rainforest normally spared from wildfires. In eastern Washington state, a fire destroyed most of the tiny farming town of Malden.
"This will not be a onetime event," Oregon Governor Kate Brown told a Thursday news conference. "We are feeling the acute impacts of climate change"
Over 100 years of fire suppression by state and federal authorities has created a huge buildup of dead trees and undergrowth to fuel fires that have naturally burned in the West's forests for eons.
In recent decades Americans have built houses in those forests as second homes or due to rising prices in metropolitan areas like San Francisco, Portland and Seattle.
Scientists say climate change has contributed to greater extremes in wet and dry seasons, causing vegetation to flourish then dry out, leaving more abundant, volatile fuel for fires.
Wildfires have burned over 1.25 million hectares in California so far this year, marking a record for any year, with six of the top 20 largest wildfires in state history occurring in the last nine months.
Reuters