Cool weather helps firefighters in California

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Cooling temperatures and higher humidity gave firefighters some welcome relief as they waged an assault against a wildfire that had burned to the edges of a popular resort town.
APTOPIX SoCal Wildfire
Heavy fire races over a ridge top as a fire engine makes its way along Lone Pine Canyon road in the San Gabriel Mountains, 75 miles east of downtown Los Angeles, early Sunday.Mike Meadows / AP

Firefighters made progress Monday against a wildfire near a Southern California mountain town as weather turned calm and cool.

Evacuation orders remained in effect for several thousand residents of the Wrightwood area but there was little flame visible in the burn area covering 7,500 acres, or 12 square miles, on the east end of the San Gabriel Mountains about 40 miles northeast of downtown Los Angeles.

"It's mostly smoldering," said U.S. Forest Service spokeswoman Robin Prince.

Winds were about 6 mph, down from 50 mph over the weekend, and temperatures were cool.

Containment remained at 20 percent but the fire was not expected to jump its existing perimeter unless significant new winds developed, Prince said. Nearby schools were closed Monday.

Most residents appeared to have heeded warnings to leave. Three homes had been destroyed in remote canyons but none in Wrightwood.

Wrightwood, which sits at an elevation of 6,000 feet and has many year-round residents, draws daytrippers to quaint eateries and is a popular kickoff point for hiking and skiing. Houses sit in rustic settings among towering pines.

The fire erupted Saturday afternoon near the community of Lytle Creek amid strong winds, and the cause remained under investigation.

In Arizona, authorities lifted an evacuation order Monday morning for 64 homes that had been threatened by a wildfire near the scenic city of Williams, about 120 miles north of Phoenix. The blaze began as a prescribed burn that grew out of control and threatened the community known as the "Gateway to the Grand Canyon."

Fire officials said the fire was 20 percent contained, after scorching about 1,000 acres, or more than 1.5 square miles on Bill Williams Mountain.

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