Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Yosemite wildfire grows; sequoias still protected

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YOSEMITE NATIONAL PARK, Calif. – A wildfire on the edge of a grove of California’s giant sequoias in Yosemite National Park grew overnight but remained partially contained Tuesday.

The 6-day-old fire was not expected to make a significant advance into the famed Mariposa Grove, an official told a community meeting Monday evening.

“Overall it’s in a very good place,” said Matt Ahearn, the incident management team’s tactical operations commander.

Yosemite forest ecologist and firefighter Garrett Dickman also expressed optimism in an interview with SFGATE.com after surveying the western part of the grove on Sunday.

“I walked through all the parts that burned and did not see any mortality. … Some of the trees had some burn on them, but the level of burn was well within their ability to handle it,” Dickman said.

The Washburn Fire at the south end of the park covered about 5 square miles but was still 22% contained Tuesday morning, according to an incident update.

The fire has been burning since Thursday, when visitors reported smoke near Washburn Trail in the area of Mariposa Grove, a stand of hundreds of iconic trees that includes the 3,000year-old Grizzly Giant.

The next day, hundreds of visitors and residents were evacuated from the nearby community of Wawona, but the rest of Yosemite has remained open.

Sprinklers were set up in the grove to protect the ancient trees, and a structure protection group of firefighters prepared defenses for Wawona.

The fire generally has burned to the north and east, away from the grove. Conditions have been hot and dry but winds have been light.

Ahearn, the tactical operations commander, described extensive work by firefighters to cut off the fire’s movements in difficult terrain.

“We’re feeling very confident with the plan but we are being challenged with the plan,” he said. “All crews are fully engaged, fully supportive, fighting fire very aggressive.”

Ahearn expressed optimism about keeping the famous grove safe from the fire. “It’s out on the outer skirts of the Mariposa Gove,” Ahearn said. “It has backed a little ways into that, but it hasn’t backed intensely into the grove.”

Ahearn said firefighters have been clearing around the bases of the trees.

“We fully do not see fire advancing (in) from this point where we’re currently at,” he said.

Firefighters had cut by hand a containmen­t line across the entire northern edge of Mariposa Grove, he said.

Firefighters were mindful of the possibilit­y the flames could move farther east and south, which could bracket one end of the grove.

The fire’s cause remained under investigat­ion but authoritie­s consider it human-caused because there was no obvious natural spark.

The giant sequoias, native in only about 70 groves spread along the western slope of the Sierra Nevada, were once considered impervious to flames but have become increasing­ly vulnerable as wildfires, fueled by a buildup of undergrowt­h from a century of fire suppressio­n and the impact of drought exacerbate­d by climate change, have become more intense and destructiv­e.

 ?? ERIC PAUL ZAMORA/ THE FRESNO BEE VIA AP ?? A plane drops fire retardant on the Washburn Fire on Monday as it burns near the south entrance of Yosemite National Park, Calif.
ERIC PAUL ZAMORA/ THE FRESNO BEE VIA AP A plane drops fire retardant on the Washburn Fire on Monday as it burns near the south entrance of Yosemite National Park, Calif.

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