Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Three states wrestling weather- fueled wildfires

- MATT VOLZ AND KRISTIN J. BENDER

HELENA, Mont. — A wildfire driven by gusting winds swept down Glacier National Park’s most popular roadway toward a small Montana community at the park’s eastern entrance, while a blaze threatenin­g hundreds of homes in Northern California shot flames 100 feet in the air.

Both states are ravaged by drought, and rising temperatur­es and strengthen­ing winds greeted newly arrived crews taking aim at the blaze in the Northern Rocky Mountains. It burned more than 6 square miles along the eastern side of the Montana park during prime tourist season, when lodges and inns have been booked for months.

Some visitors packed up and left the region immediatel­y after seeing smoke rising above ridge tops, while others detoured to different parts of the park. Officials said only a small part of Glacier National Park’s 1,718 square miles had been closed by the fire, and most of its top attraction­s on the east and west sides were still open.

The fire ignited Tuesday and then swept along ridges near the scenic Going-to- the-Sun Road, the park’s most popular roadway, heading toward the small community of St. Mary on the park’s eastern boundary.

More than 600 campers who fled the St. Mary Glacier Park KOA on Wednesday have been replaced by officials using the campground­s as a staging area to fight the fire just over a ridge a few miles away.

Campground owner Susan Brooke said firefighte­rs marked which of her cabins to save and planned to use her pool to fight the flames if the blaze moved closer to the community. Brooke sent her staff to safety, but she and her family were staying.

“There’s not much you can do about it but keep people calm,” Brooke said.

The fire destroyed Baring Creek Cabin, a historic backcountr­y structure, torched one abandoned car and closed 21 miles of the 50- mile Going- to-the-Sun Road. Nearly 700,000 people visited the park in July last year, and about 95 percent of them traveled some length of the roadway.

No new evacuation­s were ordered in the park Thursday.

Meanwhile, the California fire threatened 200 homes and ranches outside Napa Valley. It had spread to more than 10 ½ square miles Thursday, and black smoke could be seen as far away as San Francisco and Sacramento.

More than 520 firefighte­rs battled the wildfire, struggling to access the blaze through rugged, brush- choked terrain about 45 minutes east of the popular wine country.

No wineries were at risk, said Capt. Amy Head of the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection.

Bryan Campbell said he remained hopeful that his brother’s ranch was still standing Thursday after the wildfire forced them and their neighbors to evacuate 85 horses.

“We had like 30 to 40 people show up to help, a bunch of people with trucks and trailers,” he said Thursday.

Authoritie­s said the cause of the California fire, which ignited Wednesday near Lake Berryessa, remains under investigat­ion, but the state’s deep drought has helped it thrive.

A new fire that broke out in Northern California on Thursday afternoon shut down a highway linking Sacramento and Reno, Nev., and caused a handful of evacuation­s, federal fire officials said.

A wildfire also was raging in southeaste­rn Washington state, where crews were working Thursday to prevent it from reaching a watershed that provides drinking water for the city of Walla Walla.

The fire has burned one home and more than 8 1/ 2 square miles, leading to evacuation orders for several dozen homes in two rural areas. The fire was human- caused, officials said.

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