The Arizona Republic

Some of the Yarnell residents who evacuated after the Tenderfoot Fire flared up have been allowed to return to their homes.

- KAILA WHITE, RICARDO CANO AND RON DUNGAN THE REPUBLIC | AZCENTRAL.COM

YARNELL — As the Tenderfoot Fire continued to move northeast, residents living west of State Route 89 got to return to their homes when the highway was reopened Friday afternoon.

They trickled in, restoring life to this part of the community. All the restaurant­s and stores on the west side of town, except the hardware store, have been closed since Wednesday due to lack of power and people to run them.

Anita Kristensen, who lives on the western side of the highway where officials say evacuation was voluntary,

said she was told she had to leave Wednesday evening. The fire had been close — she watched as it rolled over a nearby hill, overtaking it in 15 minutes.

“It wasn’t more scary; I think we were more ready” than in 2013, she said. “We knew exactly what we need to do, so we can go quickly.”

Kristensen lived in the mountainsi­de hamlet during the devastatin­g Yarnell Hill Fire, which killed 19 firefighte­rs and destroyed more than 100 homes west of SR 89 three years ago this month. This time around, Kristensen knew what to do: She grabbed clothes, bins of paperwork and her dog, Amigo, in half an hour.

Residents without transporta­tion were bused to a Red Cross shelter in Prescott. After spending a night at the evacuation center at Yavapai College, Kristensen stayed with friends in Skull Valley.

“Everything was very well-organized and everybody was very helpful,” she said. “Yarnell is really close-knit . ... We have very good communicat­ion in Yarnell, looking after each other, helping each other.”

The Tenderfoot Fire is burning to the east of SR 89, where evacuation orders for parts of Yarnell and Peeples Valley to the north remained in place Friday. Officials said they would re-evaluate this morning whether they could safely allow residents to return home.

Meanwhile Friday, firefighte­rs struggled to gain control of the blaze, which was estimated to have consumed 3,300 acres and three outbuildin­gs. By midday, the number of firefighte­rs deployed had increased to 400 from 250.

“There are very limited opportunit­ies to get our folks in safely” now that the fire is moving into rugged land, incident commander Alan Sinclair said.

As firefighte­rs work, “they have to ensure that they can safely get people out of a bad situation,” Sinclair said. “And in rugged terrain, that’s very hard to do.”

The fire has moved away from the community of Yarnell in a northeaste­rly direction. Sinclair said fire managers will be looking for opportunit­ies to the northeast of the current fire area, where firefighte­rs can safely engage and suppress the flames south of Wagoner Road, which skims the southweste­rn edge of the Prescott National Forest.

“They’re taking time — and we have time,” Sinclair said. “There’s no immediate threat to structures.”

Ray Collins, a Vietnam veteran who lives on the west side of Yarnell, said he and most of his neighbors stayed put since they were told the evacuation wasn’t mandatory.

“I didn’t think there was any danger in it because I didn’t think it would ever cross the highway,” Collins said. He watched the flames burning on ridgelines from his vine-covered front porch.

“It was a pretty good-size fire, but not as big as the other one three years ago, and it didn’t move as fast as three years ago,” he said. “The planes were working real hard trying to get it under control. The fire department was working their butt off to get it under control, and I think they did a good job.”

He’s lived there since 2004, and during the Yarnell Hill Fire, embers burned two patches of his roof. Although this one was smaller, it still hurts the area, he said. “People say, ‘It didn’t bother anything except just the mountain,’ but it did bother all the wildlife. They’ll be gone for a long time. Back here, they were just starting to come back.”

He had started seeing deer and javelinas, but now thinks it will be years before animals return.

“It affects them as much as it does the people,” he said. “Even though the fire didn’t come over here on the west side of town, it still affects everybody’s life.”

Although fire crews had expected winds Friday, what ended up happening was “not to the extent they were talking about,” said Dean McAlister, a fire-management spokesman.

“Nothing had that big of an effect on the fire. If anything, it kind of moderated it because it was partly cloudy and humidity is up,” he said Friday evening.

As for Saturday, he said, “the weather is supposed to be more in our favor because they’re talking about the possibilit­y of showers the next couple days and cooler temperatur­es. That really aids the firefighte­rs.”

Topography and weather have been key difference­s between the Tenderfoot and Yarnell Hill blazes, fire official Mike Reichling said. In 2013, the fire was sparked in more-open terrain on the opposite end of town — and winds blew the fire in a “U-turn” back toward homes and structures, Reichling said.

Dolores Garcia, a federal Bureau of Land Management spokeswoma­n, said the Tenderfoot Fire sparked Wednesday less than a mile southeast of Yarnell. It burned through a chaparral area that was not consumed during the fatal blaze of 2013.

By the first night, the Tenderfoot Fire had reached the top of a ridge, destroying cell towers there, said Dwight D’Evelyn, a Yavapai County Sheriff’s Office spokesman.

Garcia said crews were attacking the fire from the air and the ground. That included firefighte­rs from Yarnell, Congress, Peeples Valley, the BLM and the U.S. Forest Service.

 ?? PHOTOS BY DAVID WALLACE/THE REPUBLIC ?? A DC-10, photograph­ed from Peeples Valley, drops fire retardant on the Tenderfoot Fire on Friday. The fire has burned about 3,300 acres.
PHOTOS BY DAVID WALLACE/THE REPUBLIC A DC-10, photograph­ed from Peeples Valley, drops fire retardant on the Tenderfoot Fire on Friday. The fire has burned about 3,300 acres.
 ??  ?? Anita Kristensen unloads her car as she returns to her home on the western side of State Route 89 in Yarnell on Friday. She was one of hundreds evacuated after the fire started Wednesday.
Anita Kristensen unloads her car as she returns to her home on the western side of State Route 89 in Yarnell on Friday. She was one of hundreds evacuated after the fire started Wednesday.
 ?? DAVID WALLACE/THE REPUBLIC ??
DAVID WALLACE/THE REPUBLIC

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