The Denver Post

New evacuation­s ordered around Estes Park as blaze crosses Divide

- By Kieran Nicholson, Shelly Bradbury, John Aguilar and Sam Tabachnik

GRANBY » Driven by strong winds and racing through dry fuels and timber, the East Troublesom­e fire in Grand County continued to rage Thursday, growing to more than 170,000 acres as it crossed the Continenta­l Divide and forced new evacuation­s around Estes Park.

The fire, which burned an as- yet- undetermin­ed number of homes and buildings while threatenin­g Grand Lake, increased an extraordin­ary 150,000 acres in size Wednesday night and Thursday to become the second- largest wildfire in Colorado’s recorded history.

“That’s really unheard of for a fire in this part of the world ( burning) in timber,” incident commander Noel Livingston said.

All three of Colorado’s largest recorded fires — Cameron Peak, East Troublesom­e and Pine Gulch — have burned in just the last three months, as a changing climate brings record temperatur­es, low relative

humidity and statewide drought, all fueling explosive fire growth.

“This is the worst of the worst of the worst,” Grand County Sheriff Brett Schroetlin said at a morning briefing.

The East Troublesom­e fire — which had been estimated to be around 19,000 acres in size Wednesday — burned into Rocky Mountain National Park from the southwest, raising the possibilit­y for a time that it could merge with the Cameron Peak fire, as it previously entered the national park from the north. The entire park was closed to the public.

A spot fire that sparked off East Troublesom­e burned toward Mount Wuh in the park Thursday, leading to apocalypti­c skies in Estes Park and evacuation orders in and around the town during the afternoon. But an arriving cold front helped stall that fire’s progress.

“It is not currently actively moving toward Estes Park as it was earlier in the day, so that’s a relief,” Livingston said during an evening briefing. He also downplayed earlier concerns about the two giant fires merging: “Right now we are not seeing that occurring.”

Estes Park Mayor Wendy Koenig evacuated around 3: 30 p. m. Thursday, she said. Koening lives in the Fish Creek area near Lake Estes and she left after being notified by the police department.

“Everybody was pretty calm,“said Koening about the heavy traffic heading out on U. S. 34.

In Grand County, sustained winds in the 25 to 35 mph range and gusts up to 50 mph continued to push the fire, with billowing plumes of smoke rising on its north side.

Firefighte­rs battling the blaze were in a “defensive mode, trying to protect everything we can,” said Scott Jalbert, commander with Rocky Mountain Area Command. “Our main strategy now is to focus on life and make sure everyone is evacuated out of those areas.”

Pre- evacuation notices were issued Thursday morning to residents in Granby, Granby Ranch and to areas from Grand Elk to Hot Sulphur Springs and from Grant County Road 55 to Grand County Road 88. The entire town of Grand Lake was ordered to evacuate Wednesday.

As of Thursday, the fire had not reached Grand Lake city limits, though it had burned into outlying subdivisio­ns, Schroetlin said. Numerous structures were destroyed when the fire exploded Wednesday, the sheriff said, though “the extent of that loss — we have no idea.”

It’s too soon to send deputies in to conduct damage assessment­s, he said. “There’s so much smoke and active fire in that area right now.”

“The worst one I’ve ever seen”

John “JC” Carl evacuated from his home just outside Grand Lake around 8 p. m. Wednesday. He said he had five minutes to pack and leave, so he grabbed some clothes, his guns and some financial papers and got out.

“When I left you could see how the fire was spreading into the neighborho­od,” he said.

He believes his house likely burned. A 20- year resident of the area, Carl said he had been keeping an eye on the fire but did not expect it to reach his area on Wednesday.

“The fire was so far away yesterday, it was unfathomab­le it would reach my neighborho­od” he said. He evacuated to his mother’s home in Golden and on Thursday was waiting to hear whether his house burned down.

He said he’s never seen a fire season like this year’s. “This is the worst one I’ve ever seen living in my entire life in Colorado.”

Shawn Hakes, who has lived in the Grand Meadows neighborho­od on the northeast end of Granby for five years, said he was counting on Colorado’s largest river to afford protection from the massive fire — though he acknowledg­ed it would be up to the winds as to where the fire jumps next.

“I don’t think Granby residents are too worried, because it has to come down the ridge and cross the Colorado River,” Hakes said, with some hesitation, adding: “But it ran into Grand Lake pretty fast, so everyone is being cautious.” Hakes had his Silverado ready to roll should evacuation orders come down, packed with keepsakes like his wife’s knitting and his mother’s paintings.

“All the stuff we can’t replace,” he said.

Just up the road, where open land meets the neighborho­od’s northern periphery, Jason Swann was also packing up — and waiting. The river between his house and the conflagrat­ion also gave him some solace, but he wasn’t taking it easy.

Just past his backyard fence, gray billows of smoke filled the sky above the ridgeline and flames could be seen chewing through sagebrush just a couple miles away.

“I have a lot of friends who live that way,” he said, pointing toward the fire. “They’re all safe and sound.”

Travis Eugert and his daughter Rylee Eugert could see a line of fire on a hill behind their home as they packed up to leave Granby on Thursday afternoon. Three dogs, three cats, the photos that matter — everything went into the vehicles. They’re worried about the house.

“Worst case scenario, we lose everything,” Travis said.

Once they get to a safe place, he’s going to pull out the insurance policy and give it a close read.

“This is the cherry on top of the year 2020 for us,” Rylee said.

“Not out of the woods”

Around 1 a. m. Thursday, Schroetlin offered a sober message to local residents.

“Many times when I choose to speak with you, I have a message,” Schroetlin said in a Facebook video. “Tonight I’m not even sure what those words are.”

Schroetlin said first responders made several heroic rescues and evacuation­s Wednesday as the fire rapidly approached.

He wasn’t sure what the area might look like in the morning.

“We knew this fire was here. We knew the impacts of it. We looked at every possible potential for this fire,” the sheriff said. “We never expected 6,000 acres per hour to come across our community.”

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 ?? Matthew Jonas, Boulder Daily Camera ?? Smoke from the East Troublesom­e fire fills the sky above Estes Park on Thursday.
Matthew Jonas, Boulder Daily Camera Smoke from the East Troublesom­e fire fills the sky above Estes Park on Thursday.

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