Hotter days bring bigger wildfire challenges to West
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LOS ANGELES (AP) -- A wildfire that for days has threatened hundreds of homes and popular seaside campgrounds near Santa Barbara was half-surrounded and held in check, though firefighters were about to face the hottest day yet and the kind of dry, torrid conditions prevailing from the West Coast all the way to New Mexico.
A Red Flag warning for late Sunday and early Monday, signaling dangerously dry heat and high winds, was declared for the hilly coastal area west of Santa Barbara.
The fire was 51 percent contained after burning more than 2 square miles since starting on Wednesday.
Meanwhile near downtown Los Angeles, a small-but-dangerous brush fire threatened a densely populated, hilly neighborhood along a freeway amid sizzling temperatures Sunday.
Crews knocked down the blaze in the Silver Lake neighborhood after it damaged two homes, destroyed three shed-like structures, scorched yards and sent trees up in flames.
Neighbors scrambled with garden hoses and buckets, while water-dropping helicopters and scores of firefighters chased embers and doused steep hillsides to keep the flames from spreading.
The blaze only charred 8 acres but gave urban residents a scare.
Paul Gaffner had been swimming at a pool a few minutes from his home and was planning to run errands when he saw heavy smoke near his house.
"Man, that fire is at my house," he said he thought.
When he arrived, his neighbor was hosing down flames in his backyard. In his flip-flops and shorts, he joined the fight as neighbors chipped in help protect their houses.
"It was a lot going on," Gaffner said as he handed out bottles of Gatorade to firefighters. "You've got it in front of you, you don't have time to panic."
Another wildfire that broke out Sunday forced the evacuation of about 75 people from a tiny town in the California desert near the Mexico border.
It had surged to over 2 square miles amid triple-digit temperatures near the town of Potrero, a ranching community just a few miles north of Tecate, Mexico, and about 40 miles southeast of San Diego.
In New Mexico, a 28-square-mile fire that erupted last week and destroyed 24 homes in the Manzano Mountains south of Albuquerque was largely uncontained. But higher humidity overnight allowed crews to strengthen lines around the fire and keep a lookout for hot spots where flames could jump the line.
In eastern Arizona, a fire that has burned 19 square miles southwest of Show Low advanced south, but containment increased to 40 percent.
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I wouldn't be a brush or forest firefighter for anything in this weather. They have to wear full turn out suits and up to 80lbs of equipment and in this heat that could kill.
Tomorrow here in the Palm Springs area were expecting temps of 122 to 125, in the shade. That's too hot to even go in the swimming pool. The hottest temp I have ever experienced was 123 in Phoenix and it is not supposed to be that hot here, at least not yet! This is our second freaky hot heat wave in a month. Later this week our temps will "cool down" to 113 when our average is supposed to be about 102. People out here are literally dying from the heat out here. It's the number one killer in this section of the country.
Record setting temps in Ariz, NV and CA yesterday. It's only June, I can't imagine what it's going to be like in August.