Houston Chronicle

Late-season wildfires ignite unrest, evacuation­s in West

- By Steven Dubois

The smoke, the flames, the aching lungs, the evacuation­s. They’re summertime facts of life in the U.S. West, where every wildfire season competes with memories of previous destructio­n.

This year was supposed to be mild after a wet winter and spring but has ended up one of the worst in U.S. history in land burned. The foliage that sprouted from previous rain and snow has gone bone-dry in intense heat, feeding flames in places that have not seen downpours in months and strangling cities with smoke.

The biggest fires came a little later than usual in some states, after Labor Day, when the fire season traditiona­lly starts to peter out.

A look at the fires:

Oregon

Thousands of residents have evacuated as firefighte­rs battle blazes statewide, including one devastatin­g hiking trails and waterfalls in the scenic Columbia River Gorge.

Officials expect the fire near Brookings to burn for at least another month. The weather is a wild card in a region accustomed to rain and fog. If it’s hot and dry, it will be a scary September.

“We don’t know what the weather’s going to do, and half the problem is that uncertaint­y,” said Maryjane Carlson of Brookings.

Montana

It has burned 10 homes and 30 other buildings and threatened a community on the western shore of Lake Koocanusa on Wednesday. Some 187 residents have fled West Kootenai, with most staying with families on the lake’s eastern shore or in recreation­al vehicles.

It’s among dozens of fires that have forced people from their homes, destroyed residences and filled the sky with smoke for months statewide.

Washington

Local recreation­ists and tourists mourned damage to popular hiking trails and campsites from a wildfire near Mount Rainier National Park.

It more than doubled in size to 68 square miles and closed backcountr­y trails on the east side of the iconic park.

Rangers worked to alert hikers to leave the area. Some campers were told to have their gear packed.

Smoke swathed areas from Seattle to Spokane, where the air Wednesday was rated as hazardous.

Idaho

The city of Cottonwood had the unwanted distinctio­n of having the worst air quality in the nation for much of Wednesday, the Environmen­tal Protection Agency said.

Idaho’s largest wildfire is being allowed to burn in a rugged wilderness area. Authoritie­s say they plan to protect bridges, a ranch, and other high-value sites that could be threatened by the 110-square-mile blaze.

Utah

Nearly 200 homes in a high-end neighborho­od nestled in the foothills near a northern Utah canyon were evacuated Wednesday as crews battled a blaze that has burned three houses.

Calmer winds allowed firefighte­rs to stop the 1-square-mile fire from spreading toward more homes in the city of Ogden, said Rachelle Handley of the U.S. Forest Service.

California

Twenty large blazes burned across the state, including one outside Yosemite National Park that moved through ancient sequoia trees and another that burned five homes in Los Angeles.

A big Labor Day weekend wildfire in the LA suburb of Burbank was reduced to a black scar but remained dangerous. It had burned near 1,400 homes.

In Northern California’s Trinity County, a fire on both sides of a river was expanding north toward another fire after destroying 72 homes and forcing 2,000 people to evacuate.

Outside Yosemite, crews gained ground against a blaze that burned halfway through a grove of 2,700-year-old giant sequoias. Officials said it had not killed any trees, which can withstand low-intensity fires.

 ?? Randy L. Rasmussen / Associated Press ?? Cascade Locks, Ore., nestled in fir trees alongside the Columbia River, is inundated by smoke from a nearby wildfire Wednesday. The blaze was one of dozens of wildfires that sent smoke into cities from Seattle to Denver.
Randy L. Rasmussen / Associated Press Cascade Locks, Ore., nestled in fir trees alongside the Columbia River, is inundated by smoke from a nearby wildfire Wednesday. The blaze was one of dozens of wildfires that sent smoke into cities from Seattle to Denver.

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