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  • 16
    Aug
    2012
    12:40pm, EDT

    Hundreds more flee massive wildfires; Guard joins battle in Idaho

    There are at least 70 major fires in 13 states west of the Mississippi, the result of a dry, hot summer. NBC's Kristen Dahlgren reports.

     

    By NBC News staff and wire services

    Updated at 12:10 a.m. ET: The Idaho National Guard is joining the fight against at least nine wildfires burning across the state, including the 68,000-acre Trinity Ridge blaze, one of 60 large U.S. fires being fought in one of the worst U.S. fire seasons.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Most are scorching the dry and hot Western states, including Washington, where the 22,656-acre Taylor Bridge fire five miles outside Cle Elum has charred 70-plus homes and more than 200 barns and other structures this week.

    More than 400 homes have been evacuated in the area, but firefighters managed to carve containment lines around 25 percent of the blaze's perimeter by Wednesday night, with full containment expected within a week, authorities said.

    Not only are more wildfires flaring up in the West this year than last, but the nation's fires have gotten bigger, said Jennifer Smith, of the National Interagency Fire Center in Boise, Idaho.


    As of Thursday, more than 43,000 wildfires had been reported in the U.S. this season, burning a total of nearly 6.4 million acres, or 10,000 square miles, the center said.

    The 10-year average for the period is 52,535 fires, but covering only 5 million acres, Smith said.

    Photoblogs:

    • Wildfires continue to burn, destroy homes in Central Washington
    • Lone house, surrounded by scorched earth, survives wildfire

    The massive Idaho wildfire, which has burned more than 100 square miles in the past two weeks, is bearing down on Pine and Featherville, vacation towns in the mountains 105 miles northeast of Boise.

    "It's not a question of if, but when," Boise National Forest spokesman Dave Olson said of the fire reaching Featherville's outskirts.

    The area has 450 homes, with about half inhabited year-round and the others serving as summer and weekend retreats.

    Slideshow: Wildfires burn western states

    Robert Sorbo / Reuters

    Blazes in multiple states threaten houses and cause evacuations.

    Launch slideshow

    Watch US News videos on NBCNews.com 

    In a Thursday morning update, officials from the Boise National Forest said the fire hadn't burned much closer to Featherville overnight, NBC station KTVB reported. Instead, they said the fire expanded west, overtaking the western ridge of Sheep Mountain.

    Also in Idaho, a wildfire in the Salmon-Challis National Forest stranded 250 rafters floating the Middle Fork of the Salmon River. Authorities closed a backcountry access road due to falling boulders and debris caused by the blaze. Some rafters were stuck for two days before authorities began shuttling them out Wednesday.

    When Idaho Gov. C.L. “Butch” Otter declared a state disaster on Wednesday, he allowed the Idaho Department of Lands to trigger its agreement with the Idaho National Guard to provide additional support to fire crews. That means Idaho Emergency Operations Center has been activated and will issue assignments to the National Guard, KTVB reported.

    Wildfires burn in the foothills of Southern California, destroying buildings and sending two firefighters to the hospital. NBCNews.com's Dara Brown reports.

    In Washington, NBC station KING of Seattle reported that firefighters made headway on the Taylor Bridge Wildfire burning near Cle Elum, but hot weather threatened to worsen the situation on Thursday.

    Related: Inmates join fight against Washington wildfire

    "We've got some pretty active fire weather coming in here the next couple of days, so we have to get after it and get this thing wrapped up," incident commander Rex Reed told firefighters at a morning briefing.

    More evacuations were ordered late Wednesday on the north side of the blaze, adding to the hundreds of residents who have already fled homes. The fire started Monday and quickly spread in rural areas east of Cle Elum, about 75 miles east of Seattle.

    Related: Lower temps, rain bring some relief from drought conditions

    Elsewhere:

    In California, crews were preparing for storms and strong winds at a wildfire in a remote, rugged area in Plumas National Forest. More than 900 homes were threatened by the 66-square-mile blaze in Northern California.

    Nearly a dozen major blazes were burning across California, with some 8,000 firefighters assigned to get them under control, said state fire spokesman Daniel Berlant. They made progress against a blaze in Northern California's Lake County, allowing hundreds of evacuees in the Spring Valley community to return home.

    A brutal heat wave in Southern California, however, fueled wildfires that tore through more than 24 square miles of brush. Lightning sparked a group of five fires that together burned more than 14½ square miles in a rural part of San Diego County, said state fire Capt. Mike Mohler. About 400 residents were ordered to leave in the communities of Ranchita and Santa Fe.

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    In Oregon, four major blazes have been burning across the state since a series of lightning storms last week. One fire that straddles the state's border with California threatened a local landmark, the Crowder Flat Guard Station. Another blaze, which burned 675 square miles of sagebrush along the Oregon-Nevada border since being sparked by lightning on Aug. 5, finally stopped spreading this week.

    In Nevada, 10 large wildfires were burning in northern part of the state.

    In Arizona, rainfall and cooler temperatures helped crews battling two small wildfires east of Phoenix. Both were in such remote, rugged terrain that crews were forced to attack one of the, near Superior, by air only.

    In Wyoming, firefighters used a helicopter to rescue five California men from a remote mountain fishing camp after a wildfire threatened their only way out. That blaze has burned 1,300 acres in the Shoshone National Forest, but no homes are in the extremely rugged area. Elsewhere in the state, firefighters had a 6,500-acre fire in Converse County nearly contained.

    In Montana, about 15 residents west of Polson were forced to evacuate after winds up to 30 mph helped double the size of a 7-square-mile fire. No homes were threatened, though some outbuildings have burned.

    This article includes reporting by The Associated Press, Reuters and NBC's Jim Gold.

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    • Cops: Man steals pot from police because 'it smelled so good'


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    117 comments

    But Romney says "We don't need any more firefighters."

    Show more
    Explore related topics: washington, wildfires, california, idaho, fire-safety
  • 15
    Aug
    2012
    7:30pm, EDT

    Fire crews, inmates, helicopters fight massive Washington blaze

    Elaine Thompson / AP

    Firefighters work to create a break from the fire burning behind them near Cle Elum, Wash.

    By NBC News and wire services

    Firefighters from around Washington state converged Wednesday on a wildfire that destroyed dozens of homes, just one of the blazes being fought across parched western states.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    More than 800 firefighters were expected to help fight the Taylor Bridge fire in Eastern Washington, joined by 145 prison inmates and a couple of National Guard helicopters, according to NBC station KING in Seattle. 

    As of Wednesday the wind-driven fire had destroyed more than 70 homes and 28,000 acres southeast of Cle Elum, a city 80 miles east of Seattle, in Kittitas County.


    KING reported fire crews will make an effort to protect the Hidden Valley area on the fire's north edge and the Sun Light Waters area on the southern edge.

    State Department of Natural Resources Fire Incident Commander Rex Reed said the fire is 10 percent contained, The Associated Press reported.

    "We've had a long prolonged dry period — three weeks with no precipitation at all," Reed told the AP.

    Elaine Thompson / AP

    Flames surround a house on a hillside above Bettas Road near Cle Elum, Wash.

    Gov. Christine Gregoire declared a state of emergency Tuesday in the central Washington counties of Kittitas and Yakima. 

    In Idaho officials expect the dry weather to feed the flames of the 63,000 acre Trinity Ridge fire. Dave Olson of the Boise National Forest told NBC station KTVB that he expects the fire to reach the nearby rural communities of Pine and Featherville in the immediate future.

    "It's not if, but when," he said.

    The fire had grown in the past 24 hours, according to officials. 

    The U.S. Forest Service urged residents in the area to prepare for evacuation on Wednesday. 

    A 20-year-old fire fighter died Sunday while fighting the blaze. Anne Veseth was part of a 20-person crew trying to establish and reinforce a fire line on one perimeter of the 43-acre fire when she died after being struck by a tree.

    The Idaho Statesman reported around 850 firefighters were working the fire, which started on Aug.3.

    Two fires raging in northern California have so far destroyed almost 8,000 acres and one home but are 70 percent contained, according to Daniel Berlant of the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection. 

    The fires, one dubbed the Wye fire in northeastern Lake County and the other called the Walker fire in nearby Colusa County, closed a portion of Highway 20 but it has since reopened, according to the Appeal-Democrat.

    Around 1,200 personnel and 157 fire engines were working the fire.

    The Walker fire in Colusa County threatened a clothing-optional resort in the area. Two firefighters suffered minor injuries. Other communities are still threatened but the danger has been reduced. 

    The two fires started Sunday afternoon several miles apart along Highway 20, the Press-Democrat reported.

    To the east, in Plumas National Forest, in the Sierra Nevada in Northern California, crews had to pull back Wednesday after a thunderstorm moved into the area and blowing embers spread the blaze, according to the station.

    "The day was not a good day," fire spokeswoman Alissa Tanner said. "We had some issues with that southern end of the fire."

    That blaze had burned more than 58 square miles as of Wednesday.

    In Southern California, one fire near Aguanga in Riverside County destroyed 4 1/2 square miles in just hours. One person was treated for serious burns. Air tankers dropping retardant aided firefighters during the day. 

    A fire in Joshua Tree National Park burned almost 300 acres, NBC station KCRA reported.

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    • Video: Wildfires spread in California foothills
    • Cops: Man steals pot from police because 'it smelled so good'

    Follow US News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

    6 comments

    I feel really bad for the families affected by losing their homes and Personal Property and sadly it's not going to be easy to recover. It's been over a year since my wife and I lost our home and Personal Property in the Monument Fire in Arizona on June 19, 2011.

    Show more
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