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San Diego County Fire said Tuesday afternoon that the spread of the fire was stopped. ... A few miles north, the Pala Fire broke out an hour after the Lilac Fire. It burned west of I-15 in Pala Mesa.
The Lilac Fire, the largest of the blazes, grew to 85 acres and triggered evacuations in Bonsall, a small community about 45 minutes north of San Diego. The fire has displaced 86 residents and ...
A helicopter surveys the scene during the Lilac fire in unincorporated San Diego County, CA, on Jan. 21, 2025. Exhausted Los Angeles firefighters on January 20 braced for the return of yet more ...
The Lilac Fire was a fire that burned in northern San Diego County, California, United States, and the second-costliest one of multiple wildfires that erupted in Southern California in December 2017. The fire was first reported on December 7, 2017, burned 4,100 acres (1,659 ha), and destroyed 157 structures, before it was fully contained on ...
The Border 32 Fire was a destructive wildfire that burned amid the 2022 California wildfire season, in the Barrett Junction area along Highway 94 due north of the United States-Mexican border in San Diego County, California during a statewide heatwave.
The Border 2 Fire was a wildfire that burned in the Otay Mountain area of San Diego County, two miles north of the U.S.–Mexico border. It is part of the Southern California wildfires of January 2025 .
Border 2 Fire - San Diego County, 4,250 acres, 1% contained. Laguna Fire- Ventura County, 94 acres, 70% contained. Sepulveda Fire- Los Angeles County, 45 acres, 60% contained.
NOAA hot spot map of San Diego County, October 23, 2007. Weather radar imagery of the fires on October 23. Of all the wildfires, the two largest ones were located in San Diego County. The largest, the Witch Creek Fire, burned areas in north and northeast San Diego County.