Firefighters to battle against flames,
dry California weather
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[June 23, 2016]
(Reuters) - Firefighters on Thursday
were set to face high temperatures and gusty winds as they battle five
large fires burning in drought-stricken California, officials said,
though progress allowed authorities to lift some earlier evacuation
orders.
The National Weather Service issued so-called red flag weather
warnings for a tract of southern California for Thursday, including
for mountains in Los Angeles and Santa Barbara counties where
wildfires were already burning.
California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection spokesman
Daniel Berlant said the weather conditions could fuel existing
blazes or contribute to new fires.
"We're preparing for what could be another busy day," Berlant said.
Authorities on Wednesday lifted evacuation orders on 534 homes in
foothills northeast of Los Angeles that had been imposed as
firefighters struggled to get control of two wildfires called the
San Gabriel Complex. Evacuation orders were still in effect for
another 324 homes.
As of Wednesday night, the blaze had charred 4,900 acres of
chaparral and short grass, and containment lines had been drawn
around 15 percent of the flames, according to fire information
website InciWeb.
To the south, firefighters managed to slow the spread of a massive
fire near the Mexican border town of Potrero, prompting officials to
lift some evacuation orders there as well. Fire officials said some
200 structures were under threat as of Wednesday night, down from a
peak of 1,000.
That fire, about 50 miles (80 km) southeast of San Diego, has
blackened more than 6,700 acres and was 20 percent contained as of
Wednesday night, fire officials said.
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A helicopter drops water on a wildfire in the San Gabriel mountains
as it attacks the flames near Duarte, California, June 21, 2016.
REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson
The U.S. Department of Agriculture on Wednesday said the risk of
catastrophic wildfires had increased because of the 66 million trees
that had died in California from 2010 to October 2015. Some 26
million of them were in the southern Sierra Nevada mountains.
(Reporting by Curtis Skinner in San Francisco; Editing by Alison
Williams)
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