Weather helps against California wildfire

LOS ANGELES (CNN) -- Firefighters made significant progress Saturday against a large wildfire near Los Angeles, aided by cooler temperatures, higher humidity and calmer winds.

The fire, still at 28,000 acres, was 56% contained, state fire officials reported.

"We are cautiously optimistic if weather cooperates we will continue to make good progress on this fire," Cal Fire spokesman Daniel Berlant told CNN on Saturday evening

The weather outlook was favorable for Sunday.

A forecast of possible rain -- given a 20% chance -- was encouraging, said Ventura County Fire Capt. Dan Horton.

"It's going to help us. It's going to give us a leg up on the fire," Horton said Saturday afternoon. But, he added, "there's still a lot of work to be done."

The weather change could be a mixed blessing, however, because a chance of isolated thunderstorms this weekend brings a risk of lightning sparking new fires, the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection said.

The Los Angeles-area fire, based in Ventura County, has damaged 15 residences and five commercial properties and has destroyed 25 outbuildings, fire authorities said. About 4,000 homes remained threatened.

"Firefighters are working very hard to make the fire (stay) away from these homes," Berlant said.

The inferno, called the Springs Fire, raced about 10 miles beside upscale communities and through the Santa Monica Mountains since it began Thursday morning in Camarillo. It reached the Pacific Ocean shore, damaging a Navy shooting range next to coastal wetlands Friday.

A total of 1,895 fire personnel, six fixed-wing air tankers and 11 helicopters have battled the blaze. The fire was 10% contained on Thursday and 20% on Friday.

About 300 commercial properties and 250 outbuildings also are threatened, authorities said Saturday.

The region's so-called Santa Ana winds -- dubbed "devil winds" because they are warm and gusty out of the high desert -- had been fueling the Ventura County wildfire. The virtual absence of recent rain also created dry conditions ripe for the wildfires, whose season typically begins much later in the year.

"Onshore winds have begun to diminish this evening allowing for the expiration of all red flag warnings," the National Weather Service said late Friday.

The Santa Ana winds gusted to 45 mph the past two days, energizing the roaring flames.

But Saturday saw cooler breezes rolling in from the ocean, according to Berlant.

Authorities ordered a mandatory evacuation Friday for the affluent Ventura County community of Hidden Valley, northwest of Los Angeles.

Federal funding was made available to cover 75% of firefighting costs, the Federal Emergency Management Agency announced Friday.

Also on Friday, the Ventura County blaze crossed the scenic Pacific Coast Highway that separates the Santa Monica Mountains from the sea. There, small fires blackened the landscape surrounding a military firing range, a Navy spokeswoman said.

Several timber backdrops at the range were partially or completely burned, but because the facility sits in wetlands next to a lagoon, the fires weren't a threat to Naval Base Ventura County at Point Mugu, said spokeswoman Kimberly Gearhart. Ammunition isn't stored at the facility, she said.

"If something catches fire, it's in the best possible place because it's isolated and it's near water," Gearhart said. "Our biggest concern right now is smoke because it's a very smoldering fire, and as the wind shifts, it either blows smoke toward or away from us."

Evacuation orders were in effect in several areas on Saturday, but officials lifted orders for the campus of California State University, Channel Islands in Camarillo and for the Dos Vientos community in Newbury Park, authorities said.

Many Ventura County residents, especially those who live in or near the mountains, were on edge about the fires and possible evacuation.

"The sheriff said they would come pounding on the door if they came close," said resident Elizabeth Dickenson.

CNN meteorologist Chad Myers described the fire as an omen for California because the wildfire season isn't supposed to start until August or September.

Mountain chaparral and shrubs are dry because Los Angeles has received only half of its normal rainfall the past two years, Myers said. The vegetation is brown, instead of green from winter rain, he said.

The Los Angeles area has received less than 2 inches of rain since January, making the bone-dry region "definitely ripe for these fires," said William Patzert, a NASA climatologist.