Burro Fire Reported in Los Angeles County May 18

A new wildfire dubbed the Burro Fire was first reported at 12:26 p.m. Monday in Los Angeles County, burning on federal land managed by the U.S. Forest Service. At that point, officials had not released any information on containment or cause, and fire crews were being dispatched as incident details trickled into the system.

According to the Modesto Bee, which cited the National Interagency Fire Center, the Burro Fire was logged at 12:26 p.m. on Forest Service land. That initial machine-generated entry did not list acreage, mapping data, or tactical notes beyond basic incident metadata.

Conditions driving risk

Critical fire weather, with gusty winds and low humidity, was in place across the region Monday. It is the same pattern that helped drive the Sandy Fire in Simi Valley, which burned roughly 184 acres earlier in the day, according to the Los Angeles Times. Local forecasts warned of northeast gusts of 25 to 40 mph in mountain areas, raising the odds that even a small spark could take off while firefighters juggle multiple incidents.

Where to watch for official updates

The U.S. Forest Service posts official notices on its forest alerts page and on InciWeb. The Angeles National Forest alerts page lists closures, road conditions, and public safety bulletins for the San Gabriel Mountains and serves as the primary source for localized guidance. The National Interagency Fire Center’s daily situation report also reflects elevated wildfire activity across the West this week, highlighting the strain on regional crews and aircraft availability…

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