Los Angeles Times

Heat and dry brush feed wildfires

A blaze breaks out in Orange County as one in Riverside County continues to burn.

- By Joseph Serna and Matt Hamilton joseph.serna@latimes.com matt.hamilton @latimes.com

Warm temperatur­es, low humidity and withered brush fed a wildfire in the rugged Orange County hills that charred 155 acres Wednesday as crews hustled to stop the spread of the flames.

In neighborin­g Riverside County, firefighte­rs continued to battle the Bogart fire, which grew to more than 2 square miles.

The Holy fire started in the early morning just east of Trabuco Canyon in the Cleveland National Forest, according to Orange County Fire Authority Capt. Larry Kurtz.

By late Wednesday, the blaze was 5% contained.

The flames were not threatenin­g homes but burned in steep, dry hillsides around Holy Jim Canyon and raced up north-facing slopes coated in light grasses and shrubbery. The vegetation was “starved for moisture,” Kurtz said.

Voluntary evacuation­s were issued for canyon-area residents.

But once the fire reached the top of the hills — in sweltering heat that hovered in the mid-90s — the flames stalled, Kurtz said.

“The wind is not acting on the fire. It slows down the fire’s rate of spread and gives us the chance to contain it,” he said.

Four firefighte­rs suffered non-life-threatenin­g injuries and were airlifted to hospitals, Kurtz said.

Hundreds of firefighte­rs in Riverside County continued to battle the Bogart fire, which broke out Tuesday afternoon near Beaumont’s Bogart Park.

Investigat­ors with the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection have said the fire was caused by “juvenile activity.”

The blaze spread in the hills west of the Morongo reservatio­n and destroyed at least one building, fire officials said. Authoritie­s said that by Wednesday evening, the fire had charred 1,470 acres and was 60% contained.

About 700 residents were initially evacuated, but authoritie­s canceled the evacuation order by Tuesday night.

More than 400 firefighte­rs have been assigned to combat the fire. Of those, four firefighte­rs suffered non-life-threatenin­g injuries and were treated at a hospital.

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