Texarkana Gazette

Northwest braces for flood of visitors during eclipse

- By Hal Bernton

A corridor that runs from the Oregon Coast to the Idaho border is prime real estate for those seeking clear skies to experience the Aug. 21 solar eclipse.

This zone of totality—more than 60 miles wide—also is fire country that has been baking through intense summer heat. As of Saturday, at least four significan­t blazes were burning in or close to the zone, and overnight lightning ignited more in advance of cooler weather.

Wildfires and smoky skies are a serious wild card as Oregon prepares for eclipse watchers. Oregon officials estimate that as many as 1 million people could converge on the state, creating record traffic jams and vastly complicati­ng responses to fires or any other emergencie­s.

“We are working with all the fire agencies to be strategic about where resources are staged,” said Nathan Garibay, emergency services manager for Deschutes County in central Oregon. “But please don’t park on roadsides, because that could easily create a situation where there is no place for emergency vehicles to go. And be patient.”

At the Warm Springs Indian Reservatio­n, another place that will draw visitors, fire crews worked in recent days to contain a fire just north of the zone of totality. The blaze destroyed several structures and threatened 140 homes as it burned through juniper, grass and dense stands of ponderosa pine.

Fire maps Saturday also marked blazes south of Antelope, a town in central Oregon in the zone of totality. By Saturday, the lightning strikes, along with forecast winds, helped push the region to the highest of five levels that help assign firefighti­ng resources, according to John Saltenberg­er, fire- weather program manager for the Portland-based Northwest Interagenc­y Coordinati­on Center.

Aside from the safety risks of fires, smoke could frustrate those seeking a clear view of the Aug. 21 midmorning eclipse as the moon passes between the sun and the Earth. The sun will go dark about 10:20 a.m. local time.

In the viewing areas near fires, winds could flush out much of the smoke, but it could still linger in low spots.

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