Fire crews tackle gorse blaze in Torquay
Crews from the town and Paignton responded after they received multiple calls about the fire on Rock End Avenue, in the Wellswood area.
About 20 sq m of gorse on the cliff was damaged by the blaze, Devon and Somerset Fire and Rescue Service said.
They used one jet and portable lighting to tackle the blaze.
More news stories for Devon
Listen to the latest news for Devon
Follow BBC Devon on X, Facebook and Instagram. Send your story ideas to spotlight@bbc.co.uk.
Devon and Somerset Fire and Rescue Service

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


USA Today
17 hours ago
- USA Today
'Today' star Dylan Dreyer posts sweet family photo with husband after split
"Today" meteorologist Dylan Dreyer posted a photo with husband Brian Fichera and their three sons after announcing the couple's split this month. There might be clear skies ahead for "Today" meteorologist Dylan Dreyer and her husband Brian Fichera after announcing their breakup. The third hour cohost took to Instagram on July 29 to share photos of the pair on a family vacation with their three sons – Calvin, Oliver and Rusty – after announcing the couple's separation earlier this month. "Find joy in things around you, take a deep breath, count to 10. You'll soon find you're living under sunny skies again," Dreyer captioned the post, using a quote from her 2021 children's book "Misty the Cloud: A Very Stormy Day." Dreyer's friend and third hour cohost Al Roker commented from his neck of the woods, writing "Wow!!!" on the photo. Dreyer, who is not on "Today" this week seemingly due to her Turks and Caicos vacation, has not publicly addressed the couple's split on the NBC morning franchise. 'Today' meteorologist Dylan Dreyer announces split from husband Brian Fichera Dreyer, 43, and Fichera, 38, tied the knot in 2012. Dreyer joined NBC News in September that year. The NBC meteorologist announced the couple's separation in a July 18 post on Instagram hours after the show ended, writing over a sunset photograph that "for many years, I have shared my family with you -- the highs and lows, the ups and downs, and all of the blessings and beautiful memories in between." "For that reason, I want to share with you that a few months ago, Brian and I made the decision to separate," Dreyer wrote. "We began as friends, and we will remain the closest of friends. Most importantly, we will continue to co-parent our three wonderful boys together with nothing but love and respect." While Fichera is mostly missing from her Instagram posts this year, Dreyer previously wrote "Happy Father's Day Bri!!" in a June 15 caption featuring a family selfie. It's been a cloudy year so far for NBC's third hour "Today" family. Dreyer's third hour cohost Sheinelle Jones' 45-year-old husband Uche Ojeh died from an aggressive form of brain cancer in May, and she has been off air the entire year. "With profound sadness, we share this morning that Uche Ojeh, the husband of our friend and 'Today' co-host Sheinelle Jones, has passed away after a courageous battle with an aggressive form of brain cancer called glioblastoma," show anchor Savannah Guthrie shared on May 23.
Yahoo
2 days ago
- Yahoo
Fire crews tackle gorse blaze in Torquay
Fire crews have tackled a gorse blaze in Torquay, Devon. Crews from the town and Paignton responded after they received multiple calls about the fire on Rock End Avenue, in the Wellswood area. About 20 sq m of gorse on the cliff was damaged by the blaze, Devon and Somerset Fire and Rescue Service said. They used one jet and portable lighting to tackle the blaze. More news stories for Devon Listen to the latest news for Devon Follow BBC Devon on X, Facebook and Instagram. Send your story ideas to spotlight@ More on this story Devon and Somerset Fire and Rescue Service


Los Angeles Times
4 days ago
- Los Angeles Times
City by the Bay? More like City by the Brrr! San Francisco is having its coldest summer in decades
Time to cue that famed quote, often falsely attributed to Mark Twain: 'The coldest winter I ever spent was a summer in San Francisco.' It's a cliche, sure. But this year it rings true. It really has been quite chilly in the City by the Bay, which is experiencing its coldest summer in decades, with no significant warm-up in sight and daytime highs topping out in the mid-60s. In downtown San Francisco, the average temperature in July has been 59.3 degrees, about one degree below normal, Matt Mehle, a meteorologist at the National Weather Service in Monterey, said Saturday. The average temperature in San Jose in July has been 67.4 degrees, about two degrees below normal, he said. And in Oakland, as of Saturday, the temperature had reached 75 degrees or higher just one time in July, compared with three times in February. 'It's not record-breaking — but at this point, we're looking anywhere from 20 to 30 years since we've had this cold of a summer,' said Mehle, noting that the area last saw similar weather patterns in the late 1990s. Mehle said a seasonal high-pressure system that typically brings warmer weather is somewhat misplaced this year, sitting farther west than normal. This summer, he said, a low-pressure system has been parked over the Pacific Northwest and California, leading to unrelenting cloud cover and cooler temperatures. The 'misplacement' of the high-pressure system, he added, has contributed to increased upwelling, a process by which strong winds bring deep, cold ocean water closer to the surface. When the wind blows over this colder water toward land, it brings the temperatures down. 'The coastal upwelling has been really notable right outside the San Francisco Bay and west of Point Reyes,' Mehle said. In the coming days, the drizzly gray weather along the coast is not expected to change much, said Mehle, who drove to work in Monterey on Saturday with his windshield wipers swishing. 'We're basically locked in,' he said of the weather conditions. Even in San Francisco, where countless summer tourists have unexpectedly shelled out money for sweatshirts and scarves, the chill has been the talk of the town. Nudist Pete Sferra, who keeps a journal describing how many times he walks the city in the buff, told The San Francisco Standard this week that he has 'actually been enjoying quite a few nude strolls this year.' But even he would not go out 'if it's freezing.' Walnut Creek resident Lisa Shedd, 60, told The Mercury News: 'I certainly love the temperate weather. I'm not a fan of the really hot. I don't know if it means something bad or it means something good ... but I know I'm enjoying it.' Karl the Fog — the anthropomorphized San Francisco fog with hundreds of thousands of followers on social media — joked on Instagram that the forecast for Thursday was 'partly cloudy, winds coming in from the west, and a high chance of Trump being in the Epstein files.' Farther north, this summer has brought oppressive inland heat and dangerous lightning storms. In Orleans — a tiny northeastern Humboldt County town near the site of the massive, barely-contained Butler fire in the Six Rivers and Klamath national forests— temperatures had been above 100 degrees seven times this month as of Saturday, according to the National Weather Service. In Redding, the temperature had hit 100 degrees or higher 11 times this month, topping out at 109 on July 11. Mild summer temperatures in Los Angeles, where the downtown high has averaged about 82 degrees in July, also have been satirized. This week, the popular @americanaatbrandmemes social media accounts posted a much-shared meme showing a man walking toward his house, saying: 'Summer in LA has been pretty mild!' Just inside the door, unseen by him, a woman and two children are holding knives, ready to pounce. Their names are August, September and October. In the Bay Area, Mehle warned that 'while we started off colder, that doesn't mean that summer is over.' The hottest temperature ever recorded in downtown San Francisco, he noted, was 106, on Sept. 1, 2017. 'We're sitting here under drizzle, clouds, in the cold,' Mehle said. 'It's the end of July. But summer is not over when you look at our climatology. Some people want slightly warmer temperatures — but you have to be careful what you wish for.'