PALMDALE, California (AP) — A huge wildfire churned through high desert wilderness north of Los Angeles on Friday, destroying a few buildings and forcing people from about 2,000 homes. Most of the displaced residents were allowed to return as the threat eased.
One single-family home and three mobile home residences were destroyed, another house had roof damage and various other outbuildings and garages were lost in the horse country region, authorities said.
A huge DC-10 jumbo jet tanker arrived on the scene after sunrise Friday, July 30, to drop fire retardant on the 12.5-square-mile (32-square-kilometer) blaze. Containment was estimated at only 5 percent.
The blaze erupted Thursday afternoon and prompted the evacuation of about 2,000 Antelope Valley homes, but most had returned by early Friday, Los Angeles County fire and sheriff’s officials said.
Flames up to 50 feet (15 meters) high threatened the communities of Leona Valley, Anaverde and Ranch Vista but cool, windless overnight weather helped ease the threat.
On Thursday, July 30, the fire stopped at the California Aqueduct, which runs along foothills of the San Gabriel Mountains. The concrete channel acted as a natural firebreak, fire Inspector Matt Levesque said.
"That fire burned right up to the homes (but there is) no more fuel for it to burn," he said.
Aircraft and about 500 firefighters intended to concentrate on protecting the densely populated Palmdale area a few miles away and a cluster of power transmission lines that provide electricity to much of Southern California, Bryant said.
A forecast of gusty afternoon winds and a high of 98 degrees Fahrenheit (37 degrees Celsius) were expected to pose a challenge for crews.
The fire broke out near a state highway that snakes through the San Gabriel Mountains, connecting Los Angeles to the high desert. Angeles National Forest lands lie on either side.
Farther north in Kern County, good weather helped firefighters build containment lines around two wildfires that destroyed homes in remote mountain communities earlier in the week.