Colorado Wildfire Evacuees Return to Homes

Wildfire blackened 51 square miles

 

Smoke rises from the 416 Fire behind the U.S. Highway 550 road block at Cometti Lane on Wednesday, June 13, 2018, near Durango, Colo. (Jerry McBride/The Durango Herald via AP)

 

By The Associated Press

Hundreds of Colorado residents who were forced to evacuate from a wildfire were allowed to return home Friday, while crews in Wyoming were encouraged when a fire there moved into less volatile areas.

About 1,000 homes remained under evacuation orders in southwest Colorado because of a fire that had blackened 51 square miles (132 square kilometers).

At one point, 2,200 homes were evacuated. No structures have burned.

See also  Evacuation Orders at Idaho Wildfire

The fire, which started June 1, is about 10 miles (16 kilometers) north of Durango. Fire managers said the cause is still under investigation.

Heavy rains were forecast for the Durango area Saturday after days of heat. The National Weather Service issued a flash flood warning and said flooding could hit areas where the fire burned away trees and bushes.

The Wyoming wildfire had burned about 23 square miles (60 square kilometers) by Friday, destroying a home and two outbuildings. About 400 residences have been evacuated in 10 small communities.

Crews had not been able to cut fire lines around any significant distance of the perimeter, but fire managers were encouraged Friday because the flames had moved from dense forests full of beetle-killed trees into areas with mostly grass and brush that burn with less intensity.

See also  Experts Warn of Wildfire Stress

The fire was about 40 miles (64 kilometers) southwest of Laramie, Wyoming, near the Colorado border.

The fire started Sunday. The cause was under investigation.

The U.S. Forest Service closed about 100 square miles (nearly 260 square kilometers) of public land straddling the Colorado-Wyoming state line because of the fire.

About 25 square miles (65 square kilometers) of the Arapahoe-Roosevelt National Forest in northern Colorado was closed Friday. A day earlier, about 75 square miles (194 square kilometers) of the Medicine Bow-Routt National Forest in southern Wyoming was closed.

All contents © copyright 2018 Associated Press. All rights reserved.

Topics

Newslettter

Subscribe to Our Monthly Newsletter

Stay in the loop with our wildland newsletter.

Wildfire blackened 51 square miles     By The Associated Press Hundreds of Colorado residents who were forced to evacuate from a wildfire were allowed to return home Friday, while crews in Wyoming were encouraged when a fire there moved into less volatile areas. About 1,000 homes remained under evacuation orders in southwest Colorado because […]

Get The Wildland Firefighter Newsletter

Related Articles

Californians Urged to Prepare Now for Fire Season

Californians Urged to Prepare Now for Fire Season

Darrell Smith - The Sacramento Bee SACRAMENTO, Calif. — Californians must fortify their homes against the ongoing threat of wildfire home by home, neighbor by neighbor and community by community. That’s the message state and local fire authorities are working to...

Wildfire in Sheridan County (ND) Injures Two Firefighters

Wildfire in Sheridan County (ND) Injures Two Firefighters

BRAD NYGAARD and BLAKE NICHOLSON The Bismarck Tribune, N.D. (TNS) Two firefighters were injured while helping battle a wildfire in Sheridan County over the weekend, and one of them was flown to a Twin Cities burn hospital. The blaze Saturday also destroyed a wildland...

Evacuations Ordered for McDowell County (NC) Wildfire

Evacuations Ordered for McDowell County (NC) Wildfire

The McDowell News, Marion, N.C. (TNS) Firefighters were on the scene of a wildfire in northern McDowell County Tuesday afternoon. Evacuations were ordered for the area around the fire. As of 4:15 p.m., emergency personnel were managing the fire on Armstrong Creek...