Fires

Update: Rocky Fire grows to 50 acres in Modoc County, containment still at 0%

Updates on California wildfires.
Updates on California wildfires.

The creation of this content included the use of AI based on templates created, reviewed and edited by journalists in the newsroom. Read more on our AI policy here.

Updated: 5:36 p.m. June 23

First discovered: 2 hours ago, 3:30 p.m. June 23

Initial location: South of Delta Lake, Modoc, Modoc County, Calif.

Fire unit: Bureau of Land Management

Fire type: Wildfire

Fire name: Rocky Fire

Rocky Fire initially started today at 3:30 p.m. in South of Delta Lake, Modoc in Modoc County, California.

After being active for two hours, it has burned 50 acres, an increase of 15 acres since the last update. The blaze remains uncontained and and is still burning by Tuesday evening. The cause of it is still under investigation.

See live video from the area:

Https://cameras.alertcalifornia.org/?id=Axis-LikelyMtn2

Fire containment

Containment is part of a larger plan for managing a wildfire. It is normally expressed as a percentage and it refers to how much of the fire perimeter has been surrounded/enclosed by a control line that firefighters create. The containment percentage indicates a certain level of control, but it doesn't always correlate to safety level. Also, it's important to note that containment doesn't mean a fire is out.

How is containment measured?

The incident's central command constantly receives progress reports from firefighters on the ground. As the fireline is constructed, inspected or reinforced, mappers record those details to adjust the containment percentage. The percentage tells the public how much of the fire perimeter is believed to not go beyond the control lines.

Source: Cal Fire

United Robots Sacramento

This story was originally published June 23, 2026 at 4:09 PM.

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