Cranston fire 5 percent contained near Idyllwild; 1 evacuation lifted
Residents of Pine Cove were allowed to return to their homes late Wednesday night after the Cranston fire ripped through more than 4,700 acres, igniting the day before off of Highway 74 between Hemet and Mountain Center, according to a Twitter post from the San Bernardino National Forest Service.
Please note that Pine Cove is no longer on this list. https://t.co/kOkPkHND5H
— San Bernardino National Forest (@SanBernardinoNF) July 26, 2018
However, the communities of Idyllwild, Apple Canyon, Mountain Center, Lake Hemet and Hurkey Creek were still under mandatory evacuation orders.
#CranstonFire Update:
– 2,174 homes and 3,200 people evacuated
– 5 structures destroyed— San Bernardino National Forest (@SanBernardinoNF) July 26, 2018
Firefighters were still battling the explosive and fast-moving fire in the San Jacinto Mountains Thursday morning.
The latest numbers show 2,174 homes were evacuated, affecting 3,200 people, and five structures destroyed.
The fire was listed as 5 percent contained as of 7:56 a.m. Thursday. Containment is the percent of the perimeter that firefighters have determined the fire will no longer spread beyond.
However, fire officials aren’t sure how exact those figures are, because the blaze is so active and firefighters are focused on fighting it.
Most of their attention is in the Apple Canyon region in the Lake Hemet area, with aircraft and bulldozers helping out.
Capt. Scott Visyak of Cal Fire spoke about the suspected arsonist Thursday morning at the command center set up at Lake Hemet.
“It makes you angry, and it makes you mad,” he said. “But we have a job, and that is our focus now.”
#CranstonFire home lost. pic.twitter.com/28mT4oUeJh
— TERRY PIERSON (@Fotogodterry) July 26, 2018
The smell of smoke greeted residents as far away as Redlands and San Bernardino.
Fire investigators said the fire was not an act of nature but the work of an arsonist. Area law enforcement arrested Brandon N. McGlover, 32, shortly after the fire broke out around noon Wednesday, officials said. He was arrested on suspicion of arson of wildland.
More than 700 firefighting personnel were working in high temperatures and low humidity to get a handle on the wildfire. The Idyllwild area, as is much of the Inland Empire, is enduring another excessive heat; the official warning on this one wasn’t expected to be lifted until 9 p.m. Friday, according to the National Weather Service. Temperatures are expected to be in the mid-90s Thursday and Friday.
Helicopters and airplanes helped fight the blaze, as flames gobbled up two-foot-high brush and six-foot-high chaparral.