The Register-Guard

Nearly 100 wildfires blazing across state

- Jonathan Williams

Nearly 100 fires were burning across the state on Monday, according to the Oregon State Fire Marshal.

The weekend saw red flag warnings, wind, lightning and thundersto­rms that rolled through the state. Conditions were set to remain challengin­g for firefighters on Monday.

Temperatur­es were forecast to be in the high 70s and 80s throughout much of this week.

The Oregon State Fire Marshal is asking Oregonians to pay attention to the fire danger and take steps to avoid sparking a fire.

“Our firefighters are doing everything thing they can to rise to this immense challenge, but they are taxed, and we need our fellow Oregonians’ help,” Oregon State Fire Marshal Mariana Ruiz-Temple said in a press release Sunday. “Please take precaution­s to avoid sparking a human-caused fire, be familiar with evacuation levels, and have a go-kit ready in case you need to leave your home.”

Here’s the latest updates on wildfires burning across the state.

Air quality advisory issued for southern, central and eastern Oregon

The Department of Environmen­tal Quality issued an air quality advisory due to fire smoke on Monday. The air quality advisory is for the following counties: Baker, Grant, Wheeler, Crook, Union, southern Morrow, southern Umatilla, Klamath, eastern Douglas, northern Harney and northern Malheur.

The DEQ expects intermitte­nt smoke in Deschutes, eastern Lane, Jackson, Josephine and the northern Lake County through Wednesday due to the Diamond Complex Fire.

Pyramid Fire, Ore Fire, High Prairie Fire burn in Willamette National Forest

Interagenc­y crews are tracking 24 in the Willamette National Forest, with 22 started by lightning last week. Ten of those fires have been contained, according to a news release.

“Crews are working hard, and resources are stretched across the region to meet the need as new starts are detected,” the release said.

The Pyramid Fire was 535 acres as of Monday morning east of Sweet Home in the Tombstone Pass area north of Highway 20 and south of Detroit near Santiam Junction.

The Red Flag Warning expired Sunday and near-normal temperatur­es and humidity are expected for the rest of the week due to onshore flow pushing cooler marine air inland, according to a Monday morning update.

The control efforts for Monday were set to focus on using heavy equipment to open and improve the 2041 Road and the forest road near Shedd Camp.

The lightning-caused fire was reported last Wednesday. Linn County Sheriff Michelle Duncan issued a level 3 “go now” evacuation order for a large area of the Sweet Home Ranger District that mostly includes hiking trails and campground­s in the Old Cascades region. The evacuation was coordinate­d with the U.S. Forest Service, and a closure of the area was likely. View a map of the closure area at tinyurl.com/LinnCoFire­Map.

California Interagenc­y Incident Management Team 5 took command of the fire on Sunday morning.

“The fire is burning in old-growth forests with heavy timber and steep rugged terrain, making access difficult for firefighters,” according to an Sunday update. “Crews have been constructi­ng indirect containmen­t lines using heavy equipment, opening up old roads, and clearing trails in an effort to keep the fire from spreading into the Middle Santiam Wilderness, private industrial timberland­s, and communitie­s.”

The Ore Fire, burning 7 miles northeast of Blue River, was reported to be 645 acres as of Monday morning. Rugged terrain of the Cascades and hot and dry weather pose difficulties for crews battling the flames. The cause of the fire is under investigat­ion.

On Sunday, aviation resources dropped water to moderate fire behavior and the fire slowly backed down the hillside above the FS 15 Road where it was met and held by crews on the ground. Crews continued strengthen­ing control by widening roads and removing vegetation along the FS 15, 1509 and 1513 Roads, according to a news release.

On Monday, crews were set to continue to scout additional sites where they can build control lines and stop the fire from spreading.

Willamette National Forest issued a closure order around much of Blue River Reservoir due to the Ore Fire. The closure included the following sites: Buck Mountain Trail, Tidbits South and West Trail, Gold Hill Trail, Mona Campground, Lookout Campground, and Saddle Dam Boat Launch. A map and breakdown of the closure can be found at bit.ly/4f2uzQi.

Willamette National Forest issued a closure in the Middle Fork Ranger District for the Chalk Fire. East of Saddleblan­ket Mountain, the lighting sparked fire has grown to 600 acres since last Wednesday. Closed recreation sites and campground­s include North Fork Segment #2 Trailhead and Trail 1912 and 1919. Willamette National Forest has also issued closures due to the 300-acre Pyramid Fire in the Sweet Home Ranger District. Fire closure orders for public and firefighter safety were also issued for the Tire Mountain Fire and Moss Mountain Fire near the Diamond Peak Wilderness. For closure info, go to: fs.usda.gov/alerts/willamette/alertsnoti­ces

Fires that are contained or controlled include, according to Willamette National Forest: Skipper, Alpine, Deer Creek, Deer Butte, 199 MR, 202 MR, 226 MR, 212 SRZ, 225 SRZ, and Westfir-Oakridge Road.

Burn ban issued for Linn County

A burn ban was issued Saturday for Albany, Lebanon, Sweet Home, Scio, Tangent, Brownsvill­e, Halsey-Shedd and Harrisburg due to extreme weather conditions.

The Linn County Fire Defense Board is prohibitin­g open flames, including campfires, fire pits and warming fires. Gas grills are permitted during the ban, according to a news release from the Lebanon Fire District.

People are asked to use power equipment like mowers, weed trimmers, welders and grinders during the cooler early part of the day and to have water available when using gas-powered equipment.

BLM closes public lands due to wildfires southeast of Cottage Grove

Bureau of Land Management public lands southeast of Cottage Grove are closed due to wildfires in the areas of Sharps Creek and Clark Creek.

“The closure is for public and firefighter safety, and to allow fire suppressio­n crews to continue to safely respond to the incident,” according to a Saturday news release from the BLM Northwest Oregon District.

The closure area includes:

The Sharps Creek Campground and BLM-managed public lands southeast of the town of Dorena, surroundin­g Sharps Creek Road (County Road 2460 / BLM Road No. 23-1-12) and Clark Creek Road (BLM Road No. 23-1-13). It includes BLM lands in Township 22S, Range 1W, and Township 23S, Range 1W, Sections 1-3, 11-14, 22-24, 26-27, 33-34.

These areas are closed to the public and for activities including hiking, mining, hunting and camping.

BLM said Sharps Creek Road and Clark Creek Road are open to residents in the closure area.

For more info and a map, go to: blm.gov/orwafire.

Cluster of fires southeast of Dorena

There were cluster of fires burning southeast of Cottage Drove and Dorena as of Sunday morning, including the Lane 1 Fire (562 acres). The Adam Mountain Fire (60 acres) was reported Thursday but has not been updated since.

Level 3 evacuation orders issued for Lemolo Fire

The Douglas County Sheriff’s Office on Saturday night issued level 3 “go now” and level 2 “be ready” evacuation orders for the Lemolo Fire. The fire was reported to be at least 373 acres as of Sunday night.

Level 3 evacuation­s were issued for: Bunker Hill Campground

Lemolo KOA Campground

Poole Creek Campground/Boat Ramp

Kelsay Valley Campground

The North Umpqua Trail between USFS 2612 Road and Windigo Pass intersecti­on, west to North Umpqua Trail as it intersects with USFS 2612 Road.

This includes all areas on north and northeast side of Lemolo Lake, according to the sheriff’s office.

Level 2 evacuation orders have been issued for:

East Lemolo Campground

USFS 2614 Road south of Inlet Campground, including Kelsay Valley, Pumice Flat and Elbow Butte areas.

An evacuation map can be found at www.dcso.com/evacuation­s

Find more info at the Diamond Complex Fire Informatio­n Facebook page.

12 fires burn at least 2,385 acres in the Diamond Complex

Twelve lightning-caused fires were burning at least 2,385 acres in the Diamond Complex in Umpqua National Forest.

These are the active fires in the complex:

Pine Bench: 1,107 acres (north of Highway 138 near Dry Creek)

Trail: 744 acres (east of Highway 138 on the west slope of Mount Thielsen)

Lemolo: 373 acres (north of Lemolo Lake on Bunker Hill)

Pig Iron: 27 acres (Pig Iron Mountain north of Highway 138)

Watson: 77 acres (north of Highway 138 on Watson Ridge)

Brodie: 67 acres (about 5 miles south of Highway 138 and south of Devils Canyon)

Trep: 58 acres (about 4 miles south of Highway 138)

Garwood: 5 acres (about 3 miles southwest of Mount Bailey)

Slide: 0.1 acres (northeast of Pine Bench)

Potter: 242 acres (north of Highway 138 about 2 miles southeast of Potter Mt.)

Ooya: 95 acres (north of Highway 138 about 1 mile northeast of Bird Point)

Clearwater: 3 acres (south of Highway 138 about 5 miles northwest of Diamond Lake)

A level 2 “be set” evacuation warning was issued due to the Boulder Flat/Pine Bench Fire east of Roseburg and Glide in the North Umpqua Canyon near Toketee Falls. The evacuation was for homes in the Slide Creek area downstream to the Soda Springs area due to a fire near Soda Springs and Pine Bench in Toketee. A map of the evacuation area can be found here: bit.ly/4dc3qsB.

On Sunday, “Dozer lines were reinforced with water delivery hose lines from Hwy 138 to the Mt. Thielsen Wilderness boundary. Firefighters continued active suppressio­n on the Pig Iron fire and made good progress to protect critical infrastruc­ture. Firefighters worked to keep the Pine Bench fire west of Forest Road 4775 and away from critical infrastruc­ture as the fire moves north into the Boulder Creek Wilderness,” according to a Monday new release.

The weather in the area will begin a warming trend with drier weather expected to continue into Wednesday. This will add to the challengin­g fire behavior due to rugged and steep terrain.

Round Mountain, Wickiup fires burn in Central Oregon

The Round Mountain and Wickiup fires on Deschutes National Forest are at a combined 276 acres as of Monday morning, according to Central Oregon Fire Info. Wickiup Fire is now at 40% containmen­t and Round Mountain is at 10%. Level 2 and 3 evacuation orders were issued around Wickiup Reservoir.

All lines held overnight into Monday morning on the Wickiup and Round Mountain fires. On Monday, crews were set to continue to use equipment and water to secure and strengthen lines to keep the fires in their current footprint.

Evacuation maps can be found at bit.ly/3Wr3y1B.

Highway closures due to Jackpine Fire

The Deschutes County Sheriff’s Office has closed Highway 31 north and southbound due to the 180-acre Jackpine Fire.

The fire is 15% contained. According to Central Oregon Fire Info, firefighters improved dozer lines around the perimeter, installed hoses and cooled hot spots on Saturday.

A lever 2 “be set” evacuation was issued west of Highway 97 to the Deschutes County line south of Masten Road.

Find current evacuation areas at: deschutes.org/emergency

Durkee Fire in Eastern Oregon grows to 173,758 acres

The Durkee Fire in Baker County grew to 173,758 acres as of Monday morning and was 0% contained.

On Saturday, Gov. Tina Kotek invoked the Emergency Conflagration Act for the fire.

On Friday, the Oregon State Fire Marshal sent structural protection resources in the form of firefighters and equipment to fight the fire in Eastern Oregon.

The fire was first reported last Wednesday and sparked by lightning strikes. The fire has brought level 1, 2 and 3 evacuation­s around Baker County. An evacuation map can be found at

bit.ly/3YaNUJ0

Pilot Rock Fire reaches 19,000 acres in Umatilla County

The Pilot Rock Fire is burning in Umatilla County and was 19,000 acres and 94% contained as of Sunday morning.

Kotek invoked the Emergency Conflagration Act for a series of fires in Umatilla County near Pilot Rock last Wednesday. The Oregon State Fire Marshal mobilized its Green Incident Management Team to protect homes in the area.

Falls Fire roars to 132,751 acres in Grant and Harney counties

The Falls Fire burning in Grant and Harney counties near Burns reached 132,751 acres and was 15% contained as of Monday morning, according to the morning update.

The Sunday evening update indicated fire activity increased on the north side of the fire. Crews were going to work overnight to build control lines.

The Oregon State Fire Marshal requested help from California to protect life and property against the fire on Friday.

The California Governor’s Office of Emergency Services provided three strike teams with 15 fire engines and 80 firefighters from nine different counties to provide structural protection.

Level 1, 2 and 3 evacuation orders remained in place in Grant and Harney counties. The Harney County Sheriff’s evacuation map can be found at bit.ly/4d1XvX2 for the most accurate evacuation notices.

Ten residences and 13 “other” structures were destroyed in the early stages of the fire, according to Oregon State Fire Marshal structure teams.

This fire forced the closure of several areas in the Malheur National Forest. Emigrant Creek Campground, Falls Campground, Yellowjack­et Campground and Delintment Lake Campground were all closed.

Larch Creek Fire drops all remaining evacuation­s

The Larch Creek Fire was reported to be 18,286 acres and 81% contained as of Monday morning.

On Monday, the Wasco County Sheriff’s Office dropped all remaining evacuation orders.

The majority of Oregon’s national and state forests outlawed campfires, except in campground­s.

Willamette National Forest and Siuslaw national forests, to the east and west of the Willamette Valley, implemente­d fire restrictio­ns this week.

Fire restrictio­ns prohibit all campfires, charcoal or briquette fires, pellet fires or other open fires outside of designated campground­s. Building, maintainin­g or using a fire, campfire or stove was still permitted in designated metal campfire rings or grills in designated recreation­al sites.

Restrictio­ns for smoking, off-highway vehicles and chainsaws in campground­s were also in effect.

Restrictio­ns and updates to restrictio­ns as they change can be found at fs.usda.gov/main/willamette/fire.

 ?? ?? The Ore Fire is burning 7 miles northeast of Blue River. On Monday morning, the fire had reached 645 acres in steep and rugged terrain.
The Ore Fire is burning 7 miles northeast of Blue River. On Monday morning, the fire had reached 645 acres in steep and rugged terrain.

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