Panicked residents living in the path of one of California's deadliest wildfires became trapped when their escape routes were blocked or got snarled with traffic.
At least seven people burned to death inside their vehicles while trying to escape from Paradise on Thursday as 27,000 people packed on to a four-lane road which was the only route out of town that wasn't blocked.
Survivors told of how they sat in miles-long tailback as flames licked at their car doors, while others jumped out and ran, carrying pets and valuables.
When the Camp Fire struck near Paradise on Thursday morning, 27,000 people tried to flee the town on roads that were quickly blocked (pictured, a downed power line stops traffic) or else clogged with cars
Journeys that should have taken minutes ended up taking hours, with dozens of people telling how they jumped out of the cars and ran, carrying whatever they could
Nichole Jolly, 34, a nurse at the hospital in Paradise, said she attempted to flee in her truck before being rammed into a ditch by another motorist trying to get out.
She climbed out of her truck and tried to get into another, but the handles had melted off, so she ran up the road as her pants leg caught on fire.
'I'm breathing in the hottest air I've ever been in. My throat is bloodied, I'm about to hit the ground but the bottom of my shoes were melting,' she told NBC.
'I put hand out in front of me and prayed to God, "Please, don’t let me die like this."'
At least 29 people have died in the Camp Fire which engulfed the town of Paradise, with seven of those found inside burned-out cars
Authorities are still searched for bodies among the ash, but say the flames were so intense that many have been reduced to bone fragments
Evacuations were hindered by the fact that Paradise is a popular retirement community, meaning many residents are elderly and struggle to move
Medics at the Feather River Hospital in Paradise were given just 20 minutes to clear all the patients out before the fire arrived
She did eventually make it to a fire truck, where the crew told her to 'brace yourself because we might not make it'.
It was only after a bulldozer arrived to clear the road that the truck, and Jolly, were able to escape.
Meanwhile Lauri Kester, a caretaker for the elderly, told the New York Times that it took an hour to drive just three miles on Thursday as the fire advanced.
Eventually, a police officer running past told Kester to abandon her vehicle and make a break for it. She grabbed her dog Biscuit and ran.
'It was hot, it was smoky and - this sounds like such an exaggeration, but - it was apocalyptic,' she said.
Wendell Whitmore, 62, was another of those who tried to flee Paradise in his car, but was forced to make a break for it on foot as the situation became desperate.
Butte County Sheriff Cory Honea revealed another 228 people are unaccounted for, adding that finding their remains is proving difficult, as many bodies have been reduced to little more than bone fragments
The death toll rose on Sunday after the remains of five people were found inside houses in Paradise, while another was found in a nearby car (pictured, body bags are loaded into a hearse in Paradise)
The extent of the Camp Fire is seen in this satellite image taken on November 10, as it burned through northern California
At least 29 people have died in the Camp wildfire, making it the joint-deadliest in California's history alongside the Griffith Park fire which struck Los Angeles in 1933 (pictured, bodies are located in the town of Paradise)
A car sits next to a trail of metal which was melted by the heat of the fire before solidifying again as the blaze moved away
He told the Sacramento Bee: 'There were flames to the left of me and flames to the right. The flames were up in the trees, all the houses were on fire.
'The fire was three feet from my car. The rubber around the windows was melting. That’s when I decided to get out.'
Jody Jones, mayor of Paradise who previously worked as a traffic specialist in LA, said the town did put together an evacuation plan after a fire tore through in 2008.
The plan called for Paradise to evacuate neighborhood by neighborhood, and they even practiced it last year, but it fell to pieces within moments on Thursday.
'I don't know that you could build the infrastructure to evacuate an entire town that quickly,' she said. 'I just don’t know if that’s possible.'
In total, 29 people have been killed in the Camp Fire. It is now tied with the deadliest blaze in the state's history, a fire in Los Angeles' Griffith Park that occurred in 1933.
One of the fire's victims was an ailing woman whose body was found in bed in a burned-out house in Concow, near Paradise. Ellen Walker, who was in her early 70s, was home alone when the fire struck on Thursday, according to Nancy Breeding, a family friend
Those living in Paradise were ordered to flee their homes as the fire closed in, but found themselves trapped on roads that were not designed to carry that weight of traffic (pictured, burned-out cars near the town)
Pieces of crumbling wall and a chimney is all that remains of this house which was gutted in the Camp Fire
Some cars never made it off the driveway before being consumed by the flames, which have also destroyed 6,500 buildings
Firefighters say that the destruction in Paradise is so complete that identifying remains of the dead will be difficult
The majority have died in Paradise, which has been almost totally destroyed. Rescue teams are now on the ground in what remains of the town and have been identifying more victims each day.
Sunday saw the death toll rise after five bodies were found inside houses in the burned-out town, while another was discovered in a nearby car.
But 228 people are still unaccounted for after Paradise was engulfed by the flames, meaning that death toll could rise considerably.
Butte County Sheriff Kory Honea said the devastation is so complete in some neighborhoods that 'it's very difficult to determine whether or not there may be human remains there'.
'In some cases, the only remains we are able to recover are bones or bone fragments,' Honea said.
The statewide total of deaths from wildfires is now at 31, including two people who died inside a car in Malibu while trying to flee the Woolsey fire on Sunday night.
In southern California, the Woolsey Fire has torched more than 83,000 acres and destroyed 175 buildings along the way
The remains of a house can be seen in Westlake Village, near Thousand Oaks, after the Woolsey Fire swept through Sunday
This was the scene in Westlake Village, in California, on Sunday. The suburb is located in Thousand Oaks, just a few miles from where last week's mass shooting took place
Ten search and recovery teams are working in Paradise and authorities called in a mobile DNA lab and anthropologists to help identify victims.
Firefighters put out a red weather alert late on Sunday, saying that high Santa Ana winds could reach up to 50 mph and keep fanning the flames into Tuesday, making things worse before they get better.
Huge plumes of smoke rose in the fire area, which stretches miles from the northwest corner of Los Angeles' San Fernando Valley to the Malibu coast.
'Sadly, with these winds, it's not over yet,' Scott Jalbert, chief of Cal Fire's San Luis Obispo Unit, said Sunday morning.
A one-day lull did allow firefighters to gain 10 percent control of the Woolsey fire, which has burned more than 130 square miles in western Los Angeles County and southeastern Ventura County since Thursday.
Osby stressed there were numerous hotspots and plenty of fuel that had not yet burned, but at sunset he said there had been huge successes despite 'a very challenging day'.
The fire's cause remains under investigation but Southern California Edison reported to the California Public Utilities Commission that there was an outage on an electrical circuit near where it started as Santa Ana winds blew through the region.
Officials said the wildfires may intensify due to strong Santa Ana winds as more than 8,000 firefighters continue to battle the deadly infernos
The map above shows the three major fires currently alight burning in California, two in the south and one in the north
SoCal Edison said the report was submitted out of an abundance of caution although there was no indication from fire officials that its equipment may have been involved.
The report said the fire was reported around 2.24pm on Thursday, two minutes after the outage.
Venture County Fire Chief Mark Lorenzen hadn't heard about the Edison report. 'It wouldn't surprise me' if it turns out that winds caused equipment failure that sparked a fire, he said.
Spot fires continued to occur late Sunday afternoon near the Malibu campus of Pepperdine University, where 3,500 students were sheltering in place.
The university said it was closing the Malibu campus as well as its Calabasas campus to the north until November 26 but classes would be remotely administered online and through email.
Santa Ana winds, produced by surface high pressure over the Great Basin squeezing air down through canyons and passes in Southern California's mountain ranges, are common in the fall and have a long history of fanning destructive wildfires in the region.
But fire officials say fire behavior has changed statewide after years of drought and record summer heat that have left vegetation extremely crisp and dry.
'Things are not the way they were 10 years ago...the rate of spread is exponentially more than it used to be,' said Lorenzen, urging residents to not put their lives at risk by trying to defend their own homes instead of evacuating.
That change has impacted the ability to move firefighting resources around the state, officials said.
'Typically this time of year when we get fires in Southern California we can rely upon our mutual aid partners in Northern California to come assist us because this time of year they've already had significant rainfall or even snow,' said Osby, the LA County fire chief.
With the devastation and loss of life in the Northern California fire, 'it's evident from that situation statewide that we're in climate change and it's going to be here for the foreseeable future,' he said.
Mandatory evacuation orders remain in effect in the areas of the fire in Los Angeles County while neighboring Ventura County lifted some evacuations Sunday night.
Gerard Butler, Miley Cyrus, Robin Thicke, and Camille Grammer Meyer of 'The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills' were among those whose homes were destroyed.
Meanwhile the Kardashian clan, Simon Cowell, Will Smith, Lady Gaga and Martin Sheen were among the celebrities who had to evacuate the Malibu and Calabasas areas.
As of Sunday evening, 29 people were found dead in Northern California's Camp Fire and two were killed in Southern California's Woolsey Fire.
The Camp Fire has already burned through 109,000 acres and destroyed 6,713 buildings - most of them homes. As of Sunday morning, it was 25 percent contained.
Woolsey has spread to 83,275 acres and was 5 percent contained as of Saturday night.
Progress was made on the lines of the smaller Hill fire to the west in Ventura County, which was 70 percent contained at about seven square miles, and evacuations were greatly reduced. The Hill Fire has burned through 4,531 acres.
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News Pictures Paradise residents fleeing California wildfire got trapped in traffic as death toll rises to 29
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