Yuma Sun

Ariz. fire season already in high gear because of humans, weather

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PHOENIX — Arizona’s wildfire season is already in high gear, thanks in large part to human carelessne­ss but also weather conditions last winter that produced an abundance of vegetation now serving as fire fuel.

Approximat­ely 75,000 acres have burned as of early Wednesday, compared with approximat­ely 10,000 acres at the same point last year, KTAR reported.

At least two new wildfires were reported in mountains on Tucson’s northweste­rn outskirts after a thundersto­rm passed through the area Friday night. Officials said Saturday no structures were reported threatened.

A 980-acre human-caused fire destroyed eight homes in Cave Creek on May 30 and forced hundreds of evacuation­s before it was fully contained Tuesday. It was the second fire in Cave Creek in two weeks.

Elsewhere, a lightningc­aused fire burning in the Superstiti­on Mountains east of metro Phoenix forced evacuation of a handful of residents who later were allowed to return to their homes. That fire had burned nearly 25,000 acres and was contained around 57% of its perimeter as of Saturday with nearly 400 firefighte­rs and other personnel assigned to it.

A carpet of brush and weeds created by heavy winter rainfall has turned into fire fuel across the desert, said Brad Pitassi, assistant chief of Maricopa Fire and Medical and a spokesman for the multi-agency team that took over the fire in the Superstiti­on Mountains on Wednesday.

“It’s going to be a long, hot summer,” he said.

Lightning-caused fires accounted for about 55,000 acres of the Arizona fires reported by midweek but of the 771 wildfires this year, 741 were human caused.

Abandoned campfires, unsecured tow chains and target shooting were responsibl­e for many of the fires, said Tiffany Davila, spokeswoma­n for Arizona Forestry and Fire Management.

Residents need to clear at least 30 feet of defensible space around homes and property, said Paul Schickel, spokesman for Daisy Mountain Fire and Medical.

That department serves a largely rural but increasing­ly developed area on the northern outskirts of metro Phoenix.

Residents should also trim low-hanging branches to at least 6 feet off the ground so the fire can’t leap from the ground into trees and then onto homes, Schickel said.

“We’re really trying to get people to understand how dry these fuels are and how quickly these fires spread,” he said.

Fire season won’t end until the heavy monsoon rainfall arrives.

The National Interagenc­y Fire Center in Boise, Idaho, says fire danger in Arizona will be higher than average through July.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? IN THIS JULY 25, 2019, FILE PHOTO, unburned trees stand amid smoldering stumps and logs in an area scorched by fire in the Coconino National Forest near Flagstaff, Ariz. Arizona officials said Thursday that conditions in Arizona this year point toward a potential for high wildfire activity in the central part of the state and southward into desert areas where moist conditions during winter and early spring promoted growth of grasses.
ASSOCIATED PRESS IN THIS JULY 25, 2019, FILE PHOTO, unburned trees stand amid smoldering stumps and logs in an area scorched by fire in the Coconino National Forest near Flagstaff, Ariz. Arizona officials said Thursday that conditions in Arizona this year point toward a potential for high wildfire activity in the central part of the state and southward into desert areas where moist conditions during winter and early spring promoted growth of grasses.

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