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Two new fires ignited in San Diego County on Tuesday, as firefighters continue fighting blazes further north in Los Angeles.
The Lilac Fire, one of three brush fires that broke out in San Diego County overnight, has already displaced 86 residents and damaged two structures.
What is the size and containment of the San Diego County fires? The Lilac Fire is 80 acres and is 10% contained, according to Cal Fire’s incident update as of 7:55 a.m.
The fires come as San Diego County mountains and valleys, along with other parts of Southern California, remain under a red flag warning.
Lilac, the largest of the San Diego County fires, sparked a wave of mandatory evacuations as officials ordered residents to flee to safety.
Beautiful San Diego Mountain Lilac (ceanothus cyaneus), on the right (east) fork of the Rattlesnake Canyon trail, in Poway.
Firefighters are pushing through the Lilac fire in San Diego County, reaching 75 percent containment by 7 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 10, fire officials said.
A wildfire that sparked amid extreme fire weather conditions in San Diego’s North County, destroying homes and forcing thousands of evacuations, is now 50 percent contained.
A San Diego man found himself face-to-face with flames from the Lilac Fire and barely made it out alive.
The Lilac Fire has burned thousands of acres and forced thousands to evacuate their homes in North County San Diego.
The county's estimated cost of cleanup and erosion control in areas affected by the Lilac Fire stands at $3.9 million, officials said Tuesday as the Board of Supervisors voted to extend a state of ...
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