- Gifford Fire | CAL FIRE
Gifford Fire 5% Contained 30,519 Acres 2 Counties: San Luis Obispo, Santa Barbara Not a CAL FIRE Incident Updates will be made as they become available
- Gifford fire near Santa Maria burns 40,000 acres, injures 3
The Gifford fire near Santa Maria has burned nearly 40,000 acres, injured three people and forced evacuations across Santa Barbara and San Luis Obispo counties
- Los Padres National Forest | Gifford Fire | Forest Service
The Gifford Fire was reported shortly before 2 pm on August 1 along Highway 166 near the Gifford trailhead on the Santa Lucia Ranger District Within 24 hours the fire had burning more than 23,000 acres in tall grass and chaparral Los Padres National Forest, Santa Barbara County Fire and Cal Fire are in unified command, and Complex Incident Management Team 5 was ordered to assume control of
- Gifford Fire Grows to More Than 43,000 Acres as More . . .
The Gifford Fire near the border of Santa Barbara and San Luis Obispo counties grew to 43,118 acres as of 10 a m Sunday morning, forcing evacuation orders to be expanded as fire crews continue to construct a line along the Southern portions of the fire The blaze started Friday afternoon and
- UPDATE: Gifford fire grows to nearly 40,000 acres, 3 injured . . .
The Gifford fire burning east of Santa Maria along Highway 166 grew to 39,676 acres as of Sunday morning, with orders for immediate evacuation in multiple zones
- Gifford Fire Burns Nearly 40,000 Acres at Los Padres Forest . . .
Gifford Fire Burns Nearly 40,000 Acres at Los Padres Forest in California The Gifford fire, which has been fueled by dry conditions and warm weather, has spread to two counties, officials said
- Gifford Fire updates: Evacuations, closures, containment . . .
Firefighters battle the Gifford Fire, now 12,786 acres in San Luis Obispo and Santa Barbara counties Road closures, active evacuations and containment efforts underway
- Map: Gifford Fire explodes to California’s 2nd-biggest of the . . .
The Gifford Fire, which started Friday next to the footprint of California’s biggest 2025 wildfire, quickly grew to more than 30,000 acres and prompted evacuation orders in Santa Barbara and San
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