Houston Chronicle Sunday

Raging Washington wildfires multiply

Flames, however, are moving away from populated regions

- By Nicholas K. Geranios and Brian Skoloff

TWISP, Wash. — Reduced winds on Saturday helped firefighte­rs gain the upper hand against a series of giant wildfires in north-central Washington that earlier left three firefighte­rs dead.

The Okanogan Complex of wildfires was measured at 355 square miles on Saturday, about 100 miles larger than Friday, fire spokesman Rick Isaacson said.

But the flames were moving away from population centers in Okanogan County, which by land area is the largest in Washington state.

Many remain evacuated

Thousands of people in the county remained under evacuation orders of various levels after strong winds drove flames across parched ground last week.

Brad Craig of Omak was told to evacuate on Wednesday, but he kept coming back to check on his home. “I was coming over several times a day to check on it,” Craig said.

On Saturday, he found flames perhaps 30 yards from his back deck. With the help of firefighte­rs, he beat back the flames and was confident he had saved his house.

“I’m feeling a whole lot bet- ter than I was three hours ago,” Craig said.

Sheriff Frank Rogers said it was too early to say how many homes had burned in the county of 5,300 square miles. The official tally of three homes and 33 other structures lost was very preliminar­y, he said.

“That’ll take weeks,” Rogers said. “I know we are going to have quite a few.”

These fires are burning only one or a handful of homes at a time, not entire neighborho­ods, Rogers said.

“It’s not 45 or 50 in one spot,” he said.

Resources were so strained that on Saturday fire officials began providing basic fire training to volunteers who have machinery like backhoes and bulldozers so they can help dig fire lines.

Meanwhile, a second of the four firefighte­rs injured in a wildfire on Wednesday has been transferre­d to Harborview Medical Center in Seattle, the Northwest’s major burn center. The firefighte­r was transferre­d Friday night and is listed in satisfacto­ry condition, Harborview spokeswoma­n Susan Gregg said Saturday.

Gregg did not release the firefighte­r’s identity or the extent of his injuries, but she said he was a 47-year-old man from the Okanogan area.

“His thoughts are with the other injured firefighte­rs and those who died,” Gregg said.

Three firefighte­rs were killed and four injured when flames overtook them Wednesday while they were battling the Okanogan Complex.

Another firefighte­r remains in critical condition at Harborview with burns over 60 percent of his body.

Officials have said the injured firefighte­rs were trying to escape the flames on foot.

Winds die down

The firefighte­r who was newly admitted to Harborview is an employee of the state Department of Natural Resources, agency spokesman Bob Redling said. He was initially treated and released from a hospital in Okanogan, and then asked to go to Harborview, Redling said.

Three firefighte­rs — Tom Zbyszewski, Richard Wheeler and Andrew Zajac — died Wednesday when flames consumed their crashed vehicle as they tried to escape the fire.

On Saturday, winds that blew at 35 mph or more earlier in the week let up.

“The winds have died down,” said Angela Seydel, spokeswoma­n for Okanogan County Emergency Management.

Flames on Saturday were moving away from population centers in the county of 41,000 people, Rogers said. “Things are pretty good,” he said.

 ?? Elaine Thompson / Associated Press ?? A firefighte­r looks over a controlled fire being used to burn out an area Saturday between a house and the main fire in Okanogan, Wash. Blazes in Washington have destroyed buildings, but the situation is so chaotic that authoritie­s have “no idea” how...
Elaine Thompson / Associated Press A firefighte­r looks over a controlled fire being used to burn out an area Saturday between a house and the main fire in Okanogan, Wash. Blazes in Washington have destroyed buildings, but the situation is so chaotic that authoritie­s have “no idea” how...

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