This evacuation came almost four years to the day after the Cedar Fire of 2003. Eventually, the Witch Creek Fire led to the evacuations of 500,000 people, 200,000 of whom lived within the City of San Diego. On the morning of October 22, 2007, about a day after the Witch Creek Fire had ignited, residents of San Diego County were ordered to evacuate through the Reverse 911 system. During its duration, 80–100 feet-high flames were reported by fire officials in the Witch Fire, and the Witch Fire exhibited the characteristics of a firestorm at its height. The last remaining fire, the Harris Fire, was fully extinguished on November 16. The Witch–Poomacha Complex Fire was the second-to-last fire of the 2007 October wildfires to be extinguished, with the Poomacha Fire being contained on November 13. On October 25, the Witch Fire merged with the Poomacha Fire to the north, near Palomar Mountain, before also merging with the smaller McCoy Fire on the next day. Initially igniting in Witch Creek Canyon, near Santa Ysabel, the Witch Creek Fire rapidly spread westward, fanned by powerful Santa Ana winds, and consumed large portions of San Diego County. Although the Witch Creek Fire was individually smaller than the Zaca Fire of 2007 (which burned at least 240,207 acres (972 km 2)), burning 197,990 acres (801 km 2) acres alone, after merging with the Poomacha and McCoy Fires, the Witch–Guejito–Poomacha Complex Fire had a total burn area of 247,800 acres (1,003 km 2), surpassing the Zaca Fire to become the largest complex fire of 2007. The Witch Creek Fire, also known as the Witch Fire and the Witch-Guejito–Poomacha Complex Fire, was the second-largest wildfire of the 2007 California wildfire season, and the largest one of the October 2007 California wildfires. 197,990 acres (801 km 2) burned by the original Witch Fire.(The original Witch Fire perimeter was fully contained on November 6) Image of the wildfire burning in the background, on the night of October 21, 2007
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