The Daily Courier

Fire devours Oregon’s crown jewel

- By The Associated Press

Wildfire scars beloved Columbia Gorge

TROUTDALE, Ore. — The fastmoving wildfire chewing through Oregon’s forest land is threatenin­g more than homes and people. It’s also devouring the heart of the state’s nature-loving identity.

As flames erupted this week in the Columbia Gorge, horrified Oregonians mourned the devastatio­n of beloved day trails, swimming holes and dozens of crystallin­e waterfalls that are all an easy day trip from Portland.

The Columbia River Gorge National Scenic Area attracts more than three million tourists a year and holds North America's largest concentrat­ion of waterfalls — including 77 named cascades. It is also home to 800 wildflower species, including 16 found nowhere else in the world.

The gorge’s winding trails are lush with ferns, hidden pocket waterfalls and stunning vistas of the mighty Columbia River. They are most cherished by Oregonians, who feel a deep connection to an area that’s often referred to as Oregon’s “crown jewel.”

As the flames spread through the gorge's forests at an alarming rate, social media lit up with posts recalling favourite hikes, memories of gorge weddings and worries about what will remain when the smoke clears.

“Everybody has this visceral attachment to what they care about there and that all feels like it's slipping through our fingers,” said Kevin Gorman, executive director of Friends of the Columbia Gorge. “We literally are waiting until the smoke clears to go out and assess what’s there, what we’ve lost and then try to move on from there.”

On Wednesday, two fires merged to form blaze of more than 130 square kilometres. The fire has closed a 78-kilometre stretch of nearby Interstate 84 and forced the evacuation of hundreds of homes on the far eastern fringes of Portland’s metropolit­an area.

Authoritie­s say the fire was started by a 15-year-old boy who tossed fireworks into the woods.

Scorching heat, bone-dry vegetation and winds of 50-60 km/h pushed the flames 20 kilometres in 16 hours at one point, authoritie­s said.

Embers from the blaze also were carried by winds across the Columbia River and started a spot fire on the opposite bank in Washington state.

On the Oregon side, the flames had some of the gorge’s most treasured spots in its crosshairs.

After an all-night battle, fire crews saved the historic Multnomah Lodge, a historic 92year-old informatio­n centre, bar and restaurant at the base of Multnomah Falls.

That waterfall, visible and easily accessible from Interstate 84, alone attracts more than two million visitors a year from around the world. A low bridge allows easy viewing and a steep 1.6-km hike allows visitors to peer down 190 metres from just above its drop-off while taking in a panoramic view of the Columbia River and Washington state on the far bank.

Oneonta Falls, famous for a hike that includes wading in waist-deep water through a steep-walled canyon, was also charred. Photos posted on Twitter show a popular pedestrian tunnel near the gorge ringed with flames. The fate of other waterfalls — Bridal Veil, Horsetail Falls and Ponytail Falls among them — was still uncertain.

The U-shaped canyon that holds the Columbia River is unique in its geology and contains microclima­tes nurtured by up to 180 centimetre­s of rain annually, said Gorman. But this summer has been unusually dry, creating an opportunit­y for a large fire to take hold, he said.

Gwen Farnham, a Portland resident and native Oregonian, belongs to four hiking groups and visits the gorge four times a week during the peak summer season. She has spent the past several days trying, without success, to learn what has burned and what has not in a place she reveres.

“It just has this amazing ability to actually transform me and move energy in me and take me to an incredibly happy place. I call it my church,” she said. “I’m griefstric­ken. I’m just sick. It’s like a family member has died.” The gorge has burned before. In 1902, a massive wildfire scorched the same area and also jumped the river to the Washington side. In 1991, flames crept to within a few metres of the same lodge crews battled to save this week. The scars from that blaze were still visible.

Authoritie­s sought to reassure the public. Lt. Damon Simmons, a spokesman with the Oregon Fire Marshal, on Wednesday drove the historic Columbia River Highway, a winding, two-lane road that parallels the river on the Oregon side and offers majestic viewpoints from the gorge’s steep cliffs. He came back with a hopeful message.

“The gorge still looks like the gorge,” he said. “It’s not a wasteland. It’s not a blackened, destroyed no man's land.”

 ?? The Associated Press ?? A wildfire continues to burn on the Oregon side of the Columbia River Gorge near Cascade Locks, Ore.
The Associated Press A wildfire continues to burn on the Oregon side of the Columbia River Gorge near Cascade Locks, Ore.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada