 There are currently over 13,800 firefighters on the front lines of twelve large wildfires across California. On Friday, firefighters gained full containment on the Cranston fire and quickly stopped progress on several new smaller fires. Here are the latest numbers on six of the largest fires. Containment on the Holy Fire in Orange County more than tripled overnight, thanks in part to limited spread to the west. The Holy Fire will continue to impact subdivisions along the foothills of Riverside County, but as of Saturday, repopulation is beginning to take place. Containment up to nearly 30%. Forward progress on the Ferguson fire in Yosemite Valley, Mariposa County has been stopped. Containment on the Ferguson now at 82%. The Donnell fire in Tuolumne County continues to have just 5% containment. Yesterday, air support dropped 42,000 gallons of retardant along the Highway 108 corridor. The Donnell fire now over 23,000 acres. The Mendocino Complex fire, which this past week became the largest wildfire in California history, burned another nearly 18,000 acres overnight. It is now over 500 square miles larger than California's largest city of Los Angeles. Containment up though by 7%, now at 67%, over 250 structures destroyed. Shasta County has two large fires currently burning. Today is day 20 on the Car Fire, which has now burned over 186,000 acres. Firefighters worked through the night to build and improve containment lines. Containment now at 55%. And the Hat Fire in Shasta County. Just over 2,000 acres, firefighters continued working in steep rugged terrain to increase and strengthen containment lines, containment at 25%. A red flag warning remains in effect in many parts of Northern California, including portions of the Car Fire, Mendocino Complex and Hat Fire through this evening. For the latest on any of the wildfires currently burning in California, you can go to the Incident page on the Cal Fire website, that's fire.ca.gov.