Crime & Safety
Bond Fire Held To 6,686 Acres, 75% Containment
Overnight, strong and gusty winds hit the Bond Fire area where firelines held, officials say. Winds and fire weather continue.
LAKE FOREST, CA — Even with winds whipping through the region there were no significant changes to the Bond Fire overnight. Resident reports of hotspots were quickly taken care of, according to Orange County Fire Authority in a news release, and the acreage scorched by the blaze has dropped rather than increased, due to updated mapping.
The brush fire that has blackened 6,686 acres and destroyed 31 buildings since being triggered by a Silverado Canyon house fire last week was 75% contained as dry, windy weather was again forecast for Tuesday.
Firefighters expected Santa Ana winds to peak Tuesday morning, with continuing dry conditions and low humidity, prompting the National Weather Service to issue a red-flag warning that will remain in effect through Tuesday night.
Find out what's happening in Lake Forestfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Air tankers are flying fire suppression missions as weather conditions allow, according to an Orange County Fire Authority spokesperson.
The fire's size was revised down to 6,686 acres, down from 7,375 acres, "due to more accurate mapping," officials said.
Find out what's happening in Lake Forestfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Nearly 1,200 personnel were assigned to the blaze, along with 10 helicopters, three water tenders and seven dozers, according to Cal Fire and the Orange County Fire Authority.
"Overnight, strong, gusty winds developed over the fire area. Firefighters worked to construct and improve fireline, and patrol the fire area. Firelines continue to hold and today crews will continue to patrol diligently in areas where strong winds could have the potential to spread the fire and threaten adjacent communities," officials said Tuesday morning.
The wind-whipped blaze started just before 10:15 p.m. last Wednesday in the 29400 block of Silverado Canyon Drive.
All evacuation orders were previously lifted, but evacuation warnings remain in effect for:
- Blackstar Canyon;
- Baker Canyon;
- Silverado Canyon;
- Williams Canyon;
- Modjeska Canyon;
- Portola Hills in Lake Forest
- northern Trabuco Canyon area
Displaced residents needing a place to stay were told to go to El Modena High School in Orange.
Full road closures include Highway 241 at Santiago Canyon Road and Santiago Canyon Road at Silverado Canyon Road. Only residents are able to traverse Santiago Canyon Road at Ridgeline Road.
Animal evacuation centers were set up at the Anaheim Equestrian Centre at 1370 S. Sanderson Ave. and the Orange County Fair & Event Center.
City News Service, Patch Editor Ashley Ludwig contributed to this report.
Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.