Radio reports reveal the scramble to contain the Eaton fire as it exploded from a 10-acre brush fire to a devastating 14,000-acre blaze that destroyed thousands of homes.
Jason Deach and Mike Griswold — two handymen at the Zorthian Ranch, an artists colony in Altadena — had escaped the flames hours earlier, racing into the smoke, wind howling, buildings burning ...
The Eaton Fire remained at 15% containment Sunday morning, according to Cal Fire. At least 11 people have died.
Fire crews have yet to fully contain the Eaton Fire, which devastated much of Altadena and is now burning mostly in the San Gabriel Mountains. The California ... 2 from La Canada Flintridge ...
ALTADENA, Calif ... residents continue to be under evacuation orders in the region. Residents of La Cañada Flintridge were ordered to evacuate by the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department ...
There was no official alert about the wildfire barreling toward the mountainous community of Altadena ... neighborhood in LA. The town of 44,000 residents was among the California cities including ...
Firefighters continued working to contain the Eaton Fire that has burned Altadena and northern Pasadena. Here’s how the blaze grew, hour by hour.
Two handymen escaped the Eaton fire while embers hit their faces. The flames 'came down the hill at 80 miles per hour and cut through a Jeep Wagoneer like a blowtorch.'
More evacuation orders were lifted today as containment of the Eaton Fire and Palisades Fire has risen overnight due to firefighting efforts working in tandem with breaks in weather, including better humidity levels and lower winds.
Workers at the Mountain View cemetery had unique concerns the night the Eaton fire broke out. The 55-acre expanse may also have spared some homes from the flames.
On Jan. 11, an airborne imaging spectrometer managed by NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory flew over Los Angeles County to survey the damage from the historic fires. It captured images of charred hillsides in Angeles National Forest, devastated neighborhoods in Altadena and — just west of the Eaton fire’s burn scar — the 170-acre JPL campus.
When asked what was the best place for lunch in Altadena, I often recommended Fox’s Restaurant on north Lake Avenue. Their elevated take on the BLT — stacked with roasted