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The Woolsey Fire ignited on the Los Angeles–Ventura county line, in an area covered by a joint protection agreement between Ventura County, L.A. County, and Los Angeles City fire departments.
The Mountain fire could have been a second coming of the 2018 Woolsey fire or even the 2017 Thomas fire — if not for a few conditions that changed on the ground last week.
The fast-moving Woolsey Fire burned 96,949 acres in Ventura and Los Angeles counties in November 2018, destroying 1,634 structures and causing three deaths.
As we drove deep within the Santa Monica Mountains in Agoura Hills, parts of which were still scorched by November’s Woolsey Fire, we were shocked by the scene before us. It wasn’t black. It ...
Woolsey Fire: Here’s what burned—and what’s still standing [Curbed LA] In 1961, the Bel Air-Brentwood Fire burned more than 500 structures [Curbed LA] Foursquare ...
Fire crews were making progress on the Woolsey Fire with Cal Fire reporting Sunday morning that containment had increased to 10 percent. However, strong Santa Winds were expected to return on ...
The Woolsey fire, which began just west of Chatsworth on Thursday near Santa Susana Pass, has so far burned more than 98,000 acres and destroyed at least 504 structures, mostly homes.
Before this year’s Eaton and Palisades fires, the Woolsey Fire was L.A. County’s most destructive. Sparked by Southern California Edison power lines in 2018, it killed three people and burned ...
The Woolsey Fire, which continues to burn more than a week later, is now 69 percent contained. The blaze has scorched 98,362 acres, destroyed 616 structures and damaged another 183.
The wind-whipped Woolsey fire that erupted Thursday and has forced evacuations from Agoura Hills to Malibu may have a strange name, but there’s a logical reason.. The quick-moving blaze, which ...
The Woolsey Fire would eventually destroy 1,643 structures, burn through 97,000 acres and displace more than 250,000 people. I shuffled my possessions into my car as the cellphone networks and ...
The fast-moving Woolsey Fire burned 96,949 acres in Ventura and Los Angeles counties in November 2018, destroying 1,634 structures and causing three deaths.