Antelope Valley Press

Firefighte­rs battle big blazes across the West

- By NATHAN HOWARD and JOHN ANTCZAK Associated Press

BLY, Ore. — An army of firefighte­rs labored in hot, dry and windy weather Tuesday to contain fires chewing through wilderness and burning homes across drought-stricken Western states already sweltering in the second heat wave of the year.

A high-pressure system that created the intense weather was weakening, but temperatur­es were forecast to remain above normal on the lines of more than 60 active large blazes burning in the West and Alaska.

More than 14,000 firefighte­rs and support personnel were attacking fires covering close to a million acres of land, according to the National Interagenc­y Fire Center.

The largest fire in the United States was incinerati­ng huge swaths of the Fremont-Winema National Forest in southern Oregon, where firefighte­rs received a warning about conditions from incident commander Al Lawson.

“As you go out there today — adjust your reality,” he said. “We have not seen a fire move like this, in these conditions, this early in the year. Expect the fire to do things that you have not seen before.”

The week-old Bootleg Fire had ravaged about 316 square miles by Tuesday morning, threatenin­g about 2,000 homes and destroying more than 20 others, along with other minor structures. The fire’s movement prompted authoritie­s to place additional areas under evacuation notice and expand the number of acres ordered closed on an emergency basis inside Fremont-Winema.

 ?? PETE CASTER/LEWISTON TRIBUNE VIA AP ?? A scoop plane drops water onto a burning ridge where a fire line had been created by crews of wildland firefighte­rs, Monday, July 12, 2021, at the Lick Creek Fire, south of Asotin, Wash.
PETE CASTER/LEWISTON TRIBUNE VIA AP A scoop plane drops water onto a burning ridge where a fire line had been created by crews of wildland firefighte­rs, Monday, July 12, 2021, at the Lick Creek Fire, south of Asotin, Wash.

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