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Lake Elsinore, Calif., residents hose down a field behind their homes as a brush fire approaches. It burned about 350 acres and was 90 percent contained by Wednesday night.
Photos by The Associated Press
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CORT WAREHOUSE/DRIVER Construction Komatsu Equipment Co Mechanic Education Assessment Technology, Inc Social Studies Content Writer Health Care Rio Salado College PA's/Online Instructors General CORT Warehouse Supervisor Arizona / WestWildfires checked
Blazes in three Western states retreat slowly before onslaught of wet weather, burnouts
The Associated Press
Tucson, Arizona | Published: 07.15.2004
LAKE HUGHES, Calif. - Despite withering summer heat, thousands of firefighters aided by planes slowly gained ground Wednesday against California wildfires that have burned more than 19,000 acres of brush and forest and caused hundreds of people to evacuate their homes.
Wet weather headed into the region, bringing hope of relief but also raising fears of flash flooding and new lightning-caused fires.
The Federal Emergency Management Agency authorized funds for some of the fires, which were burning in Los Angeles County, to the east in Riverside County, to the south in San Diego County and in Yosemite National Park in the Sierra Nevada.
One of the most difficult fires, 4,700 acres in Angeles National Forest on the edge of the Mojave Desert, was 46 percent contained. The fire in Pine Canyon prompted voluntary and mandatory evacuations of more than 500 homes Tuesday, and an outbuilding and a motor home were destroyed.
"The fire has been unpredictable, but now firefighters are trying to make a stand at Highway 138 to attempt to cut it off there," said Los Angeles County fire Inspector John Mancha.
In Riverside County, a 3,698-acre blaze on the edge of San Bernardino National Forest was 70 percent contained as it burned toward unpopulated terrain. It previously posed a threat to the mountain communities of Idyllwild, Pine Cove and Garner Valley.
Thunderstorms poured heavy rain on the southern end of the fire Wednesday, said Randy Nugent, a spokesman for the California Department of Forestry.
In eastern San Diego County, an 8,500-acre fire sparked by illegal fireworks was expected to be fully surrounded by nightfall Wednesday. Two outbuildings were destroyed, and four firefighters were treated for minor injuries, said California Department of Forestry firefighter Tyler Ashton.
The fire prompted evacuation of about 100 rural homes and a Boy Scout camp Tuesday, but structures or communities were no longer threatened.
In the Sierra, hikers were evacuated. and trails were closed in part of Yosemite after a lightning-sparked wildfire grew to 1,300 acres Tuesday. The fire was one of nine burning in the park, the National Park Service said.
In Nevada, a television reporter and several firefighters were injured by a wildfire that blackened 2,000 acres and destroyed nine homes in the hills just west of Carson City.
In Arizona, fire officials hoped to decide later this week when residents evacuated from two Mount Graham communities can return to their homes.
Firefighters fended off flames that threatened the 74-cabin community of Turkey Flat, the 15 cabins in Columbine and the $200 million Mount Graham International Observatory.
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