Las Vegas Review-Journal

Evacuees from Colorado fire allowed back home

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county was accidental­ly started by two men camping in the mountains who didn’t fully put out their campfire. It destroyed eight homes near the small town of Nederland.

Resident Anne Shusterman said the vast majority of people camping around the area are those who chose to live without a home, not people who have fallen on hard times and have no other choice. She said she no longer feels safe running along trails because of them and worries about the fire danger posed by them in tinder-dry conditions.

“I don’t know what it’s going to take for this city to wake up,” said Shusterman, who woke up to find heavy smoke around her home Sunday.

The latest fire started in the Sunshine Canyon area, which is dotted with expensive homes and rustic mountain residences. Dead trees exploded and sent black smoke skyward.

Residents of 426 homes were ordered to evacuate, and people who live in more than 800 others were told to be ready to leave.

Officials worried that stronger wind gusts could fan the flames overnight, but high winds did not develop. No structures have been damaged. Although Colorado’s mountain snowpack is healthy — ranging from 105 to 130 percent of normal on Monday — most of the state’s eastern half, including the populated Front Range, is experienci­ng some degree of drought. Many local government­s have enacted fire bans after weeks of warm, dry and often windy weather during what is normally one of the snowiest months of the year.

Wagner said conditions seemed more like what might normally be found in June rather than March.

“I’ve never seen if like this before,” firefighte­r Jason Morley told the Daily Camera newspaper. “There is no snow at all up there. If you picked up grass, it would just crumble in your hands.”

 ?? PAUL AIKEN/ DAILY CAMERA VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Payton Larson, 11, tries to balance her parents’ wedding album as she and her mom, Brooke, unload the family car Monday after returning to their Boulder, Colo., home after being evacuated because of a wildfire.
PAUL AIKEN/ DAILY CAMERA VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Payton Larson, 11, tries to balance her parents’ wedding album as she and her mom, Brooke, unload the family car Monday after returning to their Boulder, Colo., home after being evacuated because of a wildfire.

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