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Los Angeles Times
Los Angeles Times
National
Ruben Vives

Cloudy skies, higher humidity help Lake fire containment effort

June 27--U.S. Forest Service officials say cloudy skies and higher humidity are giving firefighters the upper hand against the 30,500-acre wildfire burning in the San Bernardino National Forest.

As of Saturday morning, the Lake fire, which erupted on June 17, was 40% contained, said U.S. Forest Service spokesman Diann McGlothen. The fire has caused more than $20 million in damages.

"We've got a good handle on it now," McGlothen said, adding that the shift has led to the reopening of Highway 38 and the lifting of most evacuation orders, except for Burns Canyon.

Cloudy conditions and a slight chance of precipitation are expected to continue Saturday, another boost that will help fire crews increase containment on the fire burning between Onyx Summit and Rimrock, McGlothen said.

"There's going to be some sprinkling, but just a little," she said. "But every little bit helps."

Things could change by Sunday. That is when the National Weather Service is predicting a small chance of lightning without precipitation, known as dry lightning.

"It is one of the biggest starters of fires -- other than man-made ones -- in the West," said Brett Albright, a meteorologist with the weather service. "It is a high concern anytime we see dry air and thunderstorms that are not producing enough precipitation."

Albright emphasized that the chance of dry lightning and the risk it brings is "minimal, but there's still a small threat."

Thunderstorms with heavy rain are expected to arrive in the burn areas in the next few days, increasing a chance of flooding and mudslides.

Albright said it was too early to tell when the most significant rain would fall.

ALSO

Lake fire grew after private drone flights disrupted air drops

Massive cloud of smoke from Lake fire is blanketing parts of Nevada

Lake fire in San Bernardino National Forest grows to nearly 30,000 acres

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