Dozens of homes are destroyed by wildfire in Myrtle Beach area


NORTH MYRTLE BEACH, S.C. (AP) — South Carolina’s biggest wildfire in more than three decades — a blaze four miles wide — destroyed dozens of homes Thursday and threatened some of the area’s world-famous golf courses at the height of the spring tourist season.

The flames, fed by tinder-dry scrubland, forced hundreds of people to flee, and some took shelter in the House of Blues honky-tonk.

The fire got within 11‚Ñ2 miles of Route 17, the main coastal road that links beachfront towns and is lined with fast-food restaurants, beachwear stores and trinket shops. By Thursday evening, the flames were about three miles west of the highway.

The blaze scorched about 24 square miles over the past two days and then veered north, heading away from the high-rise hotels that line Myrtle Beach. There were no reports of injuries, and authorities said they had not determined what sparked the flames.

Fueled by dry underbrush and highly combustible swamp peat, the blaze leveled about 70 homes and damaged 100 others early Thursday as the fire jumped a four-lane highway. The flames also forced authorities to evacuate 2,500 people.

Much of the damage was concentrated at Barefoot Landing, a sprawling complex of houses, condominiums and golf courses separated from the main route through Myrtle Beach by the Intracoastal Waterway.

“The house is completely gone,” said Rachel Plaga, a 38-year-old nurse, who later began sobbing. “It was like Armageddon back there. There was nothing. Everything was gone. My whole life. My kid’s whole life. It was horrific.”

Another woman who broke down in tears had to be helped to a seat by a Red Cross worker.

Garry Alderman, Horry County’s fire chief, described some homes as left with only “skeletal remains.”

The fire appeared to hopscotch through the neighborhood, which was draped in a thick haze, and some of the rubble still smoldered hours later.

One home was burned to its slab, while the brick house next door appeared undamaged, an American flag still flying.

At another home, the car in the driveway was charred, but the only damage to the house was melted vinyl siding. At one address, everything burned except the garage door, which remained standing.

After they were evacuated, some 200 residents spent the rest of the day in and around the nearby House of Blues, where officials gave them updates. Hours later, they were ushered inside to watch a video of the fire damage because they were not yet allowed to return to their homes.

Officials said the blaze appeared to die out at Barefoot Landing by midmorning, only to move parallel to the waterway. Authorities worried it could jump the channel, a canal as wide as a football field that separates the city’s main drag from the homes of retirees and people who help run the area’s golf courses, hotels and other businesses.

Just a few miles south along the coast, people were unaffected. Golfers kept their tee times and tourists spread out on the beaches. Hotel managers, who offered vouchers to the evacuees, said they could not even smell the smoke.

As ash fell, the governor issued a state of emergency, and schools closed early. But North Myrtle Beach Mayor Marilyn Hatley managed to promote the area while announcing the number of homes destroyed.

“Certainly come on to the Grand Strand area and enjoy yourself,” Hatley said.

But along Route 17 near the fire, businesses lost customers, and the thick smoke chased minigolf customers from Gail Taylor’s Hawaiian Village Golf. She had only had two customers all day — both evacuees who were trying to kill time.

The fire started several miles inland Wednesday, near subdivisions and golf courses that have been carved from forest and swamps over decades. On Thursday, state forestry officials said they issued two citations to someone for starting a fire that got out of control, but it was unclear whether that person had started the massive blaze.

The area remains prone to wildfires that spring up in the woods and scrub. Horry County Fire Rescue spokesman Todd Cartner said this week’s fire was the worst blaze since some 47 square miles burned in 1976.