Meanwhile, firefighting aircraft remained grounded because of low visibility caused by the smoke, U.S. Forest Service spokesman Mark Healey said.
The blaze had scorched 348 square miles (901 square kilometers) of brush, oaks and pines and 11 homes, as of Saturday, an area larger than the cities of San Francisco, Oakland and San Jose combined.
Of that total, 94 square miles (243 square kilometers) of wilderness have burned in the northern section of Yosemite, up from 75 square miles (194 square kilometers) a day earlier.
The fire was 40 percent contained.
Although containment efforts proceeded on a positive note overnight, officials were concerned Saturday about a 150-acre (60-hectare) spot fire that crossed a road and prompted an evacuation order for homes near the west entrance of Yosemite, Healey said.
Once planes and water-dropping helicopters were cleared to take off again, the worry lifted some along with the evacuation order.
"Air operations are going full-blast to bring this fire under control," Healey said late Saturday afternoon
Healey said fresh firefighters were being brought in to replace tired crews, but that officials did not plan to reduce the nearly 5,000 people assigned to the fire.
The blaze's cause is under investigation.