West's
wildfire season roars on as Utah homes burn
A wildfire destroyed 10
to 15 structures and forced the evacuation of hundreds of exclusive
Utah homes Tuesday as lightning-sparked blazes devoured dry grass and
brush across the West and burned to the edges of small communities in
several states.
13
August, 2013
Crews
were actively fighting fires in about a dozen Western states, where
drought has dried out the landscape and contributed to the extreme
fire behavior. Health officials, meanwhile, monitored air quality in
areas that have been blanketed by smoke for days.
In
Utah, shifting winds pushed the fire toward a community dotted with
multimillion-dollar homes near the mountain resort town of Park City.
Mike Eriksson of the Utah Division of Forestry, Fire and State Lands
said the blaze burned about 2 square miles Tuesday, and flames were
about 100 acres from some homes on a ridgeline.
Authorities
have confirmed at least three of the 10 to 15 buildings burned were
primary residences, Eriksson said.
More
than 100 people were assigned to help fight the fire, which had
calmed down some by Tuesday evening. "It's pushed back on itself
a little bit, but they're still getting some erratic winds up there,"
Eriksson said. "It's still got the potential to go about
anywhere at this point."
Evacuations
were expected to remain in place until Wednesday evening.
Russ
Moseley chose to stay in his home and fight back flames with a garden
hose as it came within 150 feet, he told The Salt Lake Tribune. He
said he could feel the heat radiating on his face and saw the fire
swallow homes below his and blow up propane tanks.
"It's
like being in Vietnam," Moseley said.
In
west-central Utah's Skull Valley, more than 20 structures were
threatened by the Patch Springs Fire that covered some 16 square
miles. No evacuations had been ordered, though the fire remained
about two miles from the town of Terra and homes on the Goshute
Indian Reservation.
More
than 200 firefighters were working to contain the largest blaze in
Utah, which has jumped at least 6 miles across the border into Idaho.
The lightning-caused State Fire has charred almost 33 square miles in
steep and rugged terrain.
The
fire was less than a mile from the Idaho town of Samaria on Tuesday,
but a fire line south of the town has held, said fire information
officer Rick Hartigan.
Nationwide,
there were 35 large active fires burning Tuesday, according to the
National Interagency Fire Center in Boise. All were in the western
United States.
Even
so, fewer than 3 million acres have been burned by U.S. wildfires
this year, NIFC reported, well down from the 5.9 million acres that
had burned by this time last year and 6.3 million acres that had
burned through mid-August in 2011.
In
Idaho, fire crews prepared to capitalize on favorable winds and lower
temperatures to continue burnout operations around the small mountain
community of Pine, where the Elk Complex remained the nation's No. 1
firefighting priority.
The
lightning-caused fire had burned across more than 140 square miles,
and fire officials were working to push the fire toward an area
already torched by a massive fire last year, fire spokeswoman Ludie
Bond said.
"Everything
seems to be going smoothly," Bond said.
No
buildings burned overnight Monday, though fire officials were still
tallying structure losses in Fall Creek, a little community several
miles south of Pine where flames rolled through on Saturday.
Pine
and the neighboring mountain hamlet of Featherville, 8 miles from the
flames, remained threatened.
Several
new, lightning-caused fires also were reported on rural, federal
lands in Idaho.
A
wildfire near Glenwood Springs, Colo., prompted a small number of
evacuations Tuesday, Garfield County Sheriff's Office spokesman
Walter Stowe said. About 60 firefighters were battling the Red Canyon
Fire with help from three single-engine air tankers and a heavy air
tanker. The fire was reported Monday.
The
dry conditions were prompting warnings from land managers across the
West, including Wyoming, where rangers complained that too many
abandoned campfires have not been property doused, despite the
extreme fire danger.
So
far this summer, 132 smoldering campfires have been discovered in
Grand Teton National Park and the adjacent Bridger-Teton National
Forest in northwest Wyoming, federal officials say.
"It
is a lot because we're only midway through our fire season and to
have that many negligent people is quite disconcerting,"
Bridger-Teton spokeswoman Mary Cernicek said.
Meanwhile,
health district officials in northern Nevada were closely monitoring
air quality concerns after a smoky haze from a wildfire in the Tahoe
National Forest more than 60 miles away descended along the eastern
Sierra front from Reno to Carson City.
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