This image provided by the Cal Fire San Bernardino Unit shows a firefighter hosing down hot spots from the Silver Fire, Sunday, March 30, 2025, in Inyo County, Calif. (Cal Fire via AP)
BISHOP, Calif. — Strong winds on Monday drove an out-of-control wildfire through a remote area of eastern California, prompting evacuations for hundreds of homes.
The Silver Fire erupted Sunday afternoon along Route 6 in Inyo County, about 5 miles northeast of Bishop in the Owens Valley.
By Monday morning, it had churned through nearly 2 square miles of dry brush, according to the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection, or Cal Fire. There was no containment.
The potential for 65 mph gusts limited flights by water-dropping helicopters and kept air tankers grounded, Cal Fire spokesperson Chloe Castillo said.
“The winds are very erratic,” she said. “One minute they’re pushing north, the next they’re going east.”
Evacuations were ordered for about 800 homes near the tiny communities of Laws, Chalfant and White Mountain Estates.
Cal Fire said the blaze was threatening land belonging to the Bishop Paiute Tribe as well as habitats for endangered species including the Owens pupfish and desert bighorn sheep.
The cause was under investigation.
Inyo County, which borders on Nevada, has received very little recent precipitation and is abnormally dry, with some areas experiencing extreme drought.
Similarly, most of Southern California is in moderate to extreme drought, according to the U.S. Drought Monitor.