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Thousands of people lost their homes when wildfires swept through California north of the Bay Area last year. And many of those people got confusing and鈥
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The images of devastation from the California Wine Country fires moved many of us. And they moved a few of our friends and neighbors into action. With鈥
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The fire season just ending (we hope) was a subject for debate even while the fires were raging; in fact, BEFORE the destructive fires in the California鈥
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By Friday morning, the wine country fires collectively had become the deadliest outbreak of fires in California history, to no one's surprise.Eight of the鈥
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You don't have to sell people in the state of 老夫子传媒 on the region's charms. And tourism certainly helps pay the bills around here. But are we getting鈥
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The arrival of cool, rainy weather in the region has seriously dampened, if not completely doused, the fires that have been burning in northern鈥
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Recent rainfall has dampened, although not completely put out, the region's wildfires. And while the rain potentially creates new problems for fire crews鈥
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The heavy fire season of this summer is just the latest in what appears to be a growing trend. Even fires that are not terribly large or intense can have鈥
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FINAL UPDATE: TUESDAY, SEPT. 19 ... Continued wet, cool weather has largely dampened the Chetco Bar fire, which now stands at 190,512 acres and is 68鈥
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FINAL UPDATE: TUESDAY, SEPT. 19 ... Rain over the past few days throughout southern Oregon and northern California has dampened the wildfires and cleared鈥
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A night and a day of rain on much of the region cleared the air in two senses: removing the smoke and lessening the fire danger.Progress on the region's鈥
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Rain. The word itself sounds pretty after a long stretch of hot weather and fires and smoke. And it began falling in the region over the weekend鈥
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The dozens of fires burning in the Northwest this summer forced thousands of people from their homes and cast clouds of heavy smoke that kept residents鈥
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鈥淚t seems like the fire went to sleep,鈥 said Cave Junction resident Heather Newman, as she examined a fire map Sunday night during a community meeting鈥