Further to the north, the Canadian province of British Columbia was under a state of emergency as fire crews there also battled blazes fueled by searing temperatures and high winds.
The worst of the brush fires in California was the Alamo fire in San Luis Obispo County, which had burned nearly 117 square kilometers as of this morning, according to the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection known as Cal Fire.
More than 1,200 fire personnel were battling the Alamo blaze, Cal Fire said, adding that hot and dry conditions were expected to continue for the next several days and the inferno has been only 15 per cent contained so far.
The Alamo fire, which began four days ago, has spread to Santa Barbara County, approximately midway between San Francisco and Los Angeles, and is currently the state's largest active fire, according to Cal Fire.
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Fire containment efforts were particularly aimed at guarding mountain peaks holding vital infrastructure such as a high-voltage line that delivers power to nearby cities, according to the Los Angeles Times newspaper.
DC-10 tanker aircraft were spreading fire retardant in a bid to prevent the fire, which has engulfed some 48 square kilometers, from spreading, according to the Los Padres National Forest service.
The Whittier fire has destroyed 20 structures and is threatening 150 more, according to Cal Fire.
Area resident Sarah Gustafson told the Los Angeles Times that she was getting her tires changed when she saw a pillar of smoke rising and realized her six cats were trapped at home.
"It was terrifying," she told the paper. "When I got home it was smokey with ash."
She then scrambled back to a Red Cross shelter parking lot where she and her cats spent the night.
Another blaze, the Wall fire in northern Butte County, has burned some 23 square kilometers and has been 35 per cent contained as of this morning, according to Cal Fire.
Four people have been injured by the Wall fire, according to the authorities.
In British Columbia, the provincial government has declared a state of emergency as thousands of firefighters battle blazes across the sprawling territory.
Kevin Skrepnek, chief information officer for the BC Wildfire Service, told the National Post that lightning storms on Friday had ignited many of the fires following a prolonged dry spell.
"We're focusing now on public safety, keeping these fires away from communities, protecting transportation routes, things like that," Skrepnek said.
Wildfires are common in California and other parts of the American west over the summer.
But he kept in place water reporting requirements, as well as bans on practices such as watering during or following rainfall and hosing off sidewalks.