A tanker filled with fire retardant makes a drop on the north end of the fire in Alpine, Utah in Wednesday, July 4, 2012. Firefighters lifted some evacuation orders and called in two hot-shot crews to help battle a still-uncontrolled Utah County wildfire Wednesday. 350 homes remained under mandatory evacuation orders as firefighters fought the nearly 2,900-acre blaze, aided by winds blowing the blaze back up the ridge, away from houses. (AP Photo/The Salt Lake Tribune, Leah Hogsten)
A tanker filled with fire retardant makes a drop on the north end of the fire in Alpine, Utah in Wednesday, July 4, 2012. Firefighters lifted some evacuation orders and called in two hot-shot crews to help battle a still-uncontrolled Utah County wildfire Wednesday. 350 homes remained under mandatory evacuation orders as firefighters fought the nearly 2,900-acre blaze, aided by winds blowing the blaze back up the ridge, away from houses. (AP Photo/The Salt Lake Tribune, Leah Hogsten)
A wildfire burns in Lambert Park Tuesday, July 3, 2012 in Alpine, Utah. Fire officials say a wildfire in Utah County destroyed a barn and forced the evacuation of Alpine neighborhoods. The Lone Peak Fire District says no houses have been damaged and the fire has moved up the Wasatch mountains. The U.S. Forest Service is stepping in to fight the fire and evacuating American Fork Canyon. The Utah National Guard says it dispatched two Blackhawk helicopters with 600-gallon water buckets. With fire crews stretched around Utah, Gov. Gary Herbert called on the guard for help. (AP Photo/The Salt Lake Tribune, Leah Hogsten)
Skyscrapers in downtown Denver are obscured by smoke drifting down from fires in Wyoming, eastern Montana and western South Dakota on Wednesday, July 4, 2012. While the wildfires are contained in Colorado, states to the north are facing an uphill battle as blazes burn unabated within their borders on Independence Day. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski)
Emily and Byron Smith, and their son Ammon, 9, who returned after being evacuated, watch air crews continue to battle a wildfire near Alpine, Utah, on Wednesday, July 4, 2012. The fire has charred 2,887 acres and destroyed one barn since it started Tuesday afternoon. About 500 homes will remain evacuated for at least the next two days. (AP Photo/The Salt Lake Tribune, Francisco Kjolseth)
Sisters Ashlyn Walker, 16, and Shianne Walker, 7, retrieve Shianne's shoes from the gymnasium of Timberline Middle School Wednesday, July 4, 2012 after spending the night at the Red Cross Shelter Evacuation center. Their family was told they could re-enter their home Wednesday morning. The Walker family of seven and nine other people from the area stayed at the shelter when a mandatory evacuation order for their neighborhood was given around 8p.m. Tuesday. A wildfire that began Tuesday in Lambert Park in Alpine burned a barn and evacuated 80 homes. (AP Photo/The Deseret News, Leah Hogsten)
DENVER (AP) ? Parts of Colorado celebrated Independence Day sans fireworks with some communities banning the holiday displays to guard against the further spread of wildfire across the region.
Though rain cooled Colorado's blazes Wednesday, more than a dozen wildfires elsewhere in the West chewed through bone-dry timber and brush.
Wildfires in Wyoming, Utah and Colorado sent haze and smoke across Colorado's Front Range, prompting air-quality health advisories as firefighters warned of growing fires in sparsely populated areas.
In Colorado Springs, there was good news in the fight against the most destructive fire in state history.
Light rains that fell early Wednesday helped calm the Waldo Canyon Fire, which has scorched 28 square miles, killed two and destroyed almost 350 homes. Firefighters predicted full containment of the fire by Sunday, with more rain, cooler temperatures and higher humidity predicted through the weekend.
As firefighting efforts continued, holiday fireworks were canceled across the region.
Colorado officials called off holiday displays from Fort Collins to Colorado Springs, while law enforcement warned of hefty fines for people caught violating personal fireworks bans.
Residents in some parched areas were joining police.
In one Colorado Springs neighborhood, a homemade sign read, "FAIR WARNING: Anyone using or allowing use of fireworks in this neighborhood will be dealt with harshly! And that doesn't mean just by the police!"
The National Interagency Fire Center in Boise, Idaho, which coordinates wildfire-fighting efforts nationwide, said 45 large fires were burning Wednesday, including 36 fires in nine Western states. Some of those fires:
MONTANA: The 380-square-mile in Custer National Forest in eastern Montana was growing with help from gusty winds. The Ash Creek Complex Fire has burned 16 homes and firefighters say the blaze "extreme" growth potential.
The 7.5 square-mile Pony Fire near Three Forks threatened a university field station but firefighters held off the blaze, official said. Still, crews were working to ensure the flames don't reach the historic mining community of Mammoth.
WYOMING: Authorities are urging more people to evacuate in the area of the 16-square-mile Squirrel Creek Fire about 30 miles southwest of Laramie. There were no figures released on the number of evacuees late Wednesday. Hundreds evacuated earlier in the week.
Meanwhile, officials say the Oil Creek Fire has scorched nearly 91 square miles but is about 40 percent contained Wednesday night.
UTAH: Nine major wildfires were burning across Utah, including the Shingle fire that has burned 8,200 acres and threatened 550 cabins or summer homes and 300 other structures in Dixie National Forest, about 30 miles southeast of Cedar City, officials said.
The Quail Fire in Alpine has scorched more than 3 square miles and destroyed one barn. About 325 homes were evacuated but some people were allowed to return Wednesday.
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