Chattanooga Times Free Press

Residents return home after fleeing latest Colorado wildfire

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Nearly 20,000 people who were forced to flee a wildfire in northern Colorado were back home Monday after firefighte­rs were able to stop the spread of the fire at 190 acres.

The fire that broke out Saturday in the rolling hills near Boulder burned to within 1,000 yards of homes on the west end of the college town, near the area where more than 1,000 homes were destroyed by a wildfire pushed by strong winds in late December. This time, winds did not prevent aircraft from being used and they were able to lay down lines of fire retardant near homes.

Containmen­t lines surrounded 35% of the fire Monday. Those lines were expected to hold despite winds caused by a shift in the weather that is forecast to bring rain Tuesday, incident commander Brian Oliver said.

Firefighte­rs were trying to extinguish embers in the burned area, working them into the soil which is moist from recent snowfall, he said. The grass which burned, however, was still dormant and dry. Pockets of smoke hung over some trees in the burn area, which would likely continue for some weeks and be monitored, Oliver said.

Previously a summer staple, wildfires are becoming a year-round occurrence in the West, as drier weather and extreme temperatur­es grow across much of the region.

Winter precipitat­ion helped ease the severity of the dry fall that preceded December’s destructiv­e fire in Colorado. However, a heat wave engulfed Western states in recent days. In Boulder County, the temperatur­e hit 78 degrees Fahrenheit, more than 20 degrees above average highs. Meanwhile, temperatur­es in southern Arizona and across Texas shot into the 90s.

In Texas, firefighte­rs were battling several wildfires, the largest of which has burned 85 square miles and was 90% contained.

Another fire, burning near the U.S. Army’s Fort Hood base in Texas, prompted evacuation­s of about 200 homes Sunday, but residents were allowed to return home later in the day. That fire has burned about 27 square miles.

Many areas of Texas were under red flag warnings Monday because of the dry, windy conditions.

 ?? AP PHOTO/DAVID ZALUBOWSKI ?? Framed against the Flatirons, a helicopter makes a drop on a wildfire burning near the National Center for Atmospheri­c Research on Sunday in Boulder, Colo.
AP PHOTO/DAVID ZALUBOWSKI Framed against the Flatirons, a helicopter makes a drop on a wildfire burning near the National Center for Atmospheri­c Research on Sunday in Boulder, Colo.

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