Wildfires have been raging in Los Angeles for days. When will they end?
CNN
Trying to estimate when the wildfires will be contained is largely guesswork. Yet the foremost factors are clear: wind and rain, or the lack thereof.
It’s been less than a week since the year’s first wildfire embers raced through the air over Los Angeles, carried by hurricane-level Santa Ana winds to spark some of the deadliest wildfires California has ever seen. The Palisades Fire started Tuesday, and by the end of Wednesday it had burned more than 17,000 acres. And in the days since, Angelenos have rallied to help those who lost everything, even as they remained on high alert, a wind gust away from potential catastrophe. Now, with the Palisades blaze and the nearby Eaton fire still mostly uncontained, renewed Santa Ana winds threaten to enlarge those blazes or even start new ones. So when will these fires end? And what do firefighters need to get the upper hand? “We need Mother Nature to give us a break,” Deputy Chief Brice Bennett of Cal Fire told CNN on Sunday. “We have the firefighters. We have the water. We need the time.” LIVE UPDATES: At least 24 killed as returning winds threaten to undo progress