Las Vegas Review-Journal

Wildfire near Mount Potosi burns 2,741 acres

It has little room to expand, officer says

- By Alexis Ford and Glenn Puit Las Vegas Review-journal

A wildfire that started Monday near Mount Potosi had burned 2,741 acres as of Tuesday afternoon, according to the U.S. Forest Service.

The lightning-caused fire burning between state Route 160 and Goodspring­s was 5 percent contained, fire prevention officer Ray Johnson said, and no major roads or communitie­s are in danger.

“The Cottonwood Fire actively moderated overnight with very little growth,” the U.S. Forest Service said in a statement Tuesday morning.

Johnson said 85 firefighte­rs, including a hotshot crew, had been working the fire all day and didn’t expect to see much growth Tuesday night. He said the crews have made “really good progress.”

“The fire basically has nowhere to go,” Johnson said. “The air crews have been dropping retardant around it all day, so it doesn’t have anywhere new to burn.”

The Forest Service said additional firefighte­rs, four engines and a water tender were being deployed. The Forest Service was also using aircraft to help fight the fire.

“(On Monday) the fire was driven by critically dry fuels, windsand topography, making suppressio­n efforts difficult for firefighte­rs and periodical­ly causing extreme fire behavior,” the Forest Service said.

“The fire burned to the base of Potosi Mountain, but has not moved up the slope of the mountain.”

The Forest Service said authoritie­s are working to protect communicat­ions infrastruc­ture at the top of Mount Potosi.

“Because of the communicat­ions site located on top of Potosi, point protection was performed by aircraft as a precaution,” the Forest Service said. “Point protection is a wildfire response strategy which protects highly valued resources from the wildfire without directly halting the continued spread.

Johnson said the fire broke out Monday morning after storms in Cottonwood Pass, southwest of the

Las Vegas Valley.

The Bureau of Land Management and the Clark County Fire Department are assisting with ground and air crews.

Contact Alexis Ford at aford@ reviewjour­nal.com or 702-3830335. Follow @alexisdfor­d on Twitter. Contact Glenn Puit at gpuit@reviewjour­nal.com. Follow @Glennatrj on Twitter. ReviewJour­nal staffer Marvin Clemons contribute­d to this report.

 ?? Ellen Schmidt Las Vegas Review-journal @ellenkschm­idttt ?? Smoke from the Cottonwood Fire peeks from behind Mount Potosi on Monday. No major roads or communitie­s were in danger, according to the U.S. Forest Service.
Ellen Schmidt Las Vegas Review-journal @ellenkschm­idttt Smoke from the Cottonwood Fire peeks from behind Mount Potosi on Monday. No major roads or communitie­s were in danger, according to the U.S. Forest Service.

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