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Wildfires force evacuations in California, Oregon, Washington

Wildfires forced thousands to flee their homes across the U.S. West during a sweltering, smoke-shrouded holiday weekend of record heat.

Los Angeles County welcomes a bit of rain but several fires still not contained

A firefighter puts out a hotspot Sunday in Burbank, Calif. Several hundred firefighters worked to contain a blaze that chewed through brush-covered mountains, prompting evacuation orders for homes in Los Angeles, Burbank and Glendale. (Mark J. Terrill/Associated Press)

Wildfires forced thousands to flee their homes across the U.S. West during a sweltering, smoke-shrouded holiday weekend of record heat.

The fires Sunday caused evacuations in Glacier National Park in Montana and many other parts of the West; compelled crews to rescue about 140 hikers who had spent the night in the woods after fire broke out along the popular Columbia River Gorge Trail in Oregon; and led firefighters to step up efforts to protect a 2,700-year-old grove of giant sequoia encroached by flames near Yosemite National Park in California.

A sudden gusty series of rainstorms allowed Los Angeles, however, to cancel evacuation orders for a wildfire that the mayor called the largest in the city's history and sent beach umbrellas and toy shovels bouncing down Southern California beaches late Sunday.

Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti had declared a local emergency earlier Sunday and Gov. Jerry Brown did the same on the state level for Los Angeles County after the wildfire destroyed three homes and threatened hillside neighbourhoods. More than a thousand firefighters battled flames that chewed through more than 23 square kilometres of brush-covered mountains.

The La Tuna Canyon in Burbank is among the wildfire-plagued areas of California. (Kyle Grillot/Reuters)

By evening, however, the day's record heat in Los Angeles had eased and a spate of brief storms even brought a bit of rain to the burning slopes, slowing the progress of the wildfire. Authorities were able to cancel the evacuation orders issued for three cities Los Angeles, Burbank and Glendale and allow allthe 1,400 people who had fled to return to their homes.

Conditions slowing the blaze could change again "in a moment's notice, and the winds can accelerate very quickly," Los Angeles fire Capt. Ralph Terrazas warned, however. "There is a lot of fuel out there left to burn."

Rare Bay Area heatwave

Officials were keeping an eye on thunderstorms, which were bringing welcome bursts of rain,but also the risk of flash floods, mudslides and lightning. Beachgoers in Santa Barbara filmed one sudden storm there that sent palm trees flapping and toddlers chasing beach toys that the wind was blowing down the beach.

The high at Los Angeles International Airport reached 36 CSunday, topping the mark of 33 Cset in 1982. Records were also set in parts of Ventura and Santa Barbara counties, where the temperature hit 38 C.

San Francisco residents, meanwhile, stifled under a third day of a rare heat wave in the coastal city, although highs in the San Francisco Bay Area fell Sunday from records in the high 30s, set the previous two days.

"I went to Home Depot, Walgreens, Office Depot, Target. They were sold out," downtown office worker Alganesh Ucbayonas said Sunday, detailing her unsuccessful search for an electric fan. "CVS," she remembered.

On Sunday, Ucbayonas sat at her desk in a building lobby squarely between two whirring fans, both scrounged from her office building's storage and trained straight at her face.

Members of the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection (Cal Fire) battle a brushfire on the hillside in Burbank on Saturday. (H.W. Chiu/Associated Press)

Fires burning up and down the Sierra Nevada and further to the northwest cast an eerie yellow and grey haze over much of California. Much of the state was under alerts because of poor air quality.

California crews are also protecting homes from a fast-moving wildfire that forced evacuations in Riverside County.

In Washington state, Gov. Jay Inslee proclaimed a state of emergency across all counties as three major fires closed recreation areas and prompted evacuations.

Flames in Montana's Glacier National Park prompted officials to evacuate all residents, campers and tourists from one of the most popular areas of the park. The order Sunday affects the Lake McDonald area, the western side of the dizzying Going-to-the Sun Road and some of the most visited trails in the area. The Lake McDonald Lodge, built in 1913, closed last week because of heavy smoke in the area.