‘We’ve got this under control’: Firefighters continue to work Big Island’s largest fire for fifth day

A Hawaii Fire Department tanker sprays down hotspots near Donald Morgan's home Tuesday morning in South Kohala. (Chelsea Jensen/West Hawaii Today)

A Hawaii Fire Department tanker sprays down hotspots near Donald Morgan's home Tuesday morning in South Kohala. (Chelsea Jensen/West Hawaii Today)

Donald Morgan's 18-year-old dog, Bob, checks out the burn area after the two returned home Tuesday morning after evacuating Sunday. (Chelsea Jensen/West Hawaii Today)

Donald Morgan talks Tuesday morning about various fires that have threatened his home near mile marker 9 on Highway 190, also known as Mamalahoa Highway, over the past 16 years he's lived there. (Chelsea Jensen/West Hawaii Today)

A U.S. Army Blackhawk helicopter picks up water Tuesday from a tank along Old Saddle Road to douse hotspots on the southern flank of the 40,000-plus-acre blaze.

Firefighters on Tuesday continued battling flames and dousing hotspots within the 62.5-square-mile burn area of the Big Island’s largest wildland fire in history.