A firefighter drags a hose uphill as his crew
prepares to put out a wildfire destroying burning homes in Yorba Linda,
Calif., Saturday, Nov. 15, 2008. (AP Photo/Mark Avery)
YORBA LINDA, Calif. -- Calmer wind in Southern California is giving
some relief to firefighters battling wildfires that have destroyed
hundreds of homes and forced thousands of residents to flee.
The National Weather Service said Sunday that the Santa Ana wind was
gusting up to 39 mph in the Sylmar area of northern Los Angeles, much
lower than the roughly 80 mph gusts that had fanned a huge wildfire
there on Saturday.
The wind has slowed to 25 mph in Orange and Riverside counties,
allowing firefighters there to set backfires to prevent flames from
moving into more neighborhoods.
The fires in Los Angeles, Riverside, Orange and Santa Barbara
counties have blackened nearly 29 square miles and destroyed more than
800 mobile homes, houses and apartments since Thursday night.