NAHUNTA, Ga. (AP) 鈥 Some of the tearing through Georgia this week are being fed by not only a persistent drought, but also by fallen trees and limbs scattered across the South by well over a year ago.
Blustery winds also are helping ignite and expand the that have blanketed parts of several states in smoke, leading to air quality warnings Thursday in cities far from the blazes.
Shifting winds made for another high-risk day with more evacuations ordered near Georgia鈥檚 coast, where a wildfire has now destroyed close to 90 homes and threatened more.
Residents there were warned to leave as many as 200 homes. Farther to the west, Georgia’s biggest fire near the Florida state line doubled in size in less than a day and by Thursday had burned through a sparsely populated area twice the size of Manhattan.
Images from the devastated areas showed the shells of charred cars and trucks sitting next to the smoldering ruins of homes nestled among blackened trees.
Many who were forced to flee this week were distraught over the homes and animals they left behind.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 know if I have a house standing or not,鈥 said Denise Stephens, who evacuated her home near Hortense because of the fast-moving Brantley County fire. 鈥淚 know what it鈥檚 taken from other people, but I don鈥檛 know what I have left standing.鈥
Wood debris littering the state鈥檚 southern half since Hurricane Helene churned through in September 2024 has enabled some of the blazes to spread and intensify quickly, officials said.
鈥淭here鈥檚 a ton of old Hurricane Helene debris down in the woods,鈥 said Seth Hawkins, a Georgia Forestry Commission spokesperson. 鈥淚t鈥檚 lying around, and it鈥檚 just a tinderbox out there.鈥
The forestry commission estimated that Helene swept across nearly 14,000 square miles (36,000 square kilometers) of forestland statewide, striking areas where trees are grown for paper and lumber.
In Helene鈥檚 wake, cleanup efforts were rolled out across southern Georgia. The state put up roughly $135 million to help private timberland owners remove fallen trees, and the Army Corps of Engineers hauled off millions of cubic yards of debris.
But they couldn鈥檛 get everything.
鈥淭he way Helene just threw everything down like matchsticks, there鈥檚 only so much you can do short of bulldozing everything,鈥 Hawkins said. 鈥淭here are big pockets of woods out there where people don鈥檛 walk around too much. So it just kind of gets left there.鈥
Brantley County, where most of the evacuations have been ordered, has less hurricane debris in its forests than some neighboring counties, County Manager Joey Cason said.
But as the wildfire continued to expand and remained unpredictable, some residents decided to stay put.
鈥淚鈥檝e been in the fire area today on both sides of it, and we have folks that are sitting in their front yards running sprinklers,鈥 Brantley County Sheriff Len Davis said. 鈥淪o some are leaving, and some are staying.鈥
It is not known yet how the wildfires started, but the bottom half of Georgia and northern Florida are both .
In Florida, firefighters were battling more than 130 wildfires, mostly in the state鈥檚 northern half. Fire crews in Georgia responded to 34 new and relatively small blazes Wednesday, the forestry commission said.
Smoke drifted across a large area of the Southeast, making the Thursday for children and people with lung or heart problems in cities as far as Columbia, South Carolina. A haze hung over Atlanta鈥檚 skyline a day earlier, and there was a smoky smell across the metro area.
Officials are hoping for rain to help tame the fires, and there is a 30% to 40% chance of showers or thunderstorms in the area of both big Georgia fires this weekend, according to the National Weather Service. While showers could bring welcome relief, thunderstorms could also produce lightning capable of sparking more fires.
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Martin reported from Atlanta, and Bynum from Savannah. Associated Press writer John Seewer in Toledo, Ohio, contributed.
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