Sailor’s SOS flare set fire to a quarter of an island and is still burning one week onSailor’s SOS flare set fire to a quarter of an island and is still burning one week on
Wildfires on Santa Rosa Island in California are still burning out of control and more than a quarter of the island had been consumed (Picture: US Coast Guard Air Station Ventura/Cover Media)

California’s largest wildfire of the year was started by a sailor stuck on an isolated island who fired a flare gun to attract attention.

The 67-year-old was trapped on Santa Rosa Island in Channel Islands National Park.

More than a quarter of the island was burned and the inferno threatened rare Torrey pine trees found in only two locations in the United States.

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According to the United States Coast Guard, the man became stranded after his sailboat struck rocks near Santa Rosa Island last Friday.

He remained on the island overnight before rescue crews reached him the following morning.

‘The sailor fired emergency flares to signal for help, which inadvertently sparked a wildfire that grew to 1,000 acres by Friday afternoon,’ officials from Coast Guard Air Station Ventura said.

The sailor had written SOS on the floor to attempt to attract attention. He is seen here shortly before he was rescued (Picture: US Coast Guard Air Station Ventura/Cover Media)

Images from the scene showed the sailor had written ‘SOS’ in the scorched grassland.

More than 70 firefighters have been deployed to tackle the blaze, which has scorched nearly 14,600 acres since it began last Friday morning.

According to the California fire tracking website, the blaze is currently 59% contained.

Officials from the National Park Service said firefighting efforts had been complicated by the outbreak of several mainland fires, including the Sandy fire in Simi Valley, which has burned more than 1,300 acres, destroyed at least one home and forced thousands of residents to evacuate.

‘Today new wildfires ignited on the mainland which immediately became the priority,’ the Park Service said in an incident update.

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‘Firefighting resources are always assigned based on the greatest threats to life, safety, and property. This prioritisation helps ensure that the most urgent needs are addressed first during rapidly evolving fire activity.’

The sailor onboard a rescue helicopter after he was retrieved by the coastguard (Picture: US Coast Guard Air Station Ventura/Cover Media)

Efforts on Monday focused on protecting the island’s Torrey pines, a rare species which exists naturally only on Santa Rosa Island and within a small reserve in San Diego.

However, officials confirmed the fire had reached the area where the trees grow.

‘Unfortunately, the fire has reached the Torrey Pines area on the east side of the island,’ the incident report stated.

‘Upon initial assessments, fire crews are observing that the fire intensity was low and that the stand remains intact. When safe to do so, a fire effects crew will be assigned to make a full determination of condition and any long-term effect.’

Strong north-easterly winds, with gusts exceeding 30mph, hampered firefighting operations on Monday.

The US Coast Guard rescue team who retrieved the sailor (Picture: US Coast Guard Air Station Ventura/Cover Media)

Despite the conditions, crews were able to create defensible space around buildings on the north-east side of the island and prepare roads for containment operations.

Firefighters were also working to protect the South Point lighthouse on the island’s south-west side.

The Park Service said additional firefighters, all-terrain vehicles, hoses and pumps were expected to arrive on Tuesday, with specialised wildfire engines due to be transported to the island later in the week.

No injuries have been reported, but two historic structures on the island – Johnson’s Lee Equipment Shed and Wreck Line Camp Cabin — have been destroyed.

Santa Rosa Island lies around 26 miles off the California coast and is home to several plant species found nowhere else in the world.


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