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Yellowstone National Park officials report minimal fire activity during the early portion of the season. However, with recent lightning strikes occurring in and around the park and continuing warm weather, fire activity has increased. No new fire starts were reported on July 22. Following is information on each of Yellowstone's wildland fires:
Fan Fire: This lightning-caused fire is located in the northwest section of
the park in a 1988 burn. As of July 17, this fire was converted to a suppression fire. This fire is 3 acres and will be checked routinely before it is declared out.
Amethyst Fire: This lightning-caused fire is located in the northeast section of the park near Amethyst Mountain and Specimen Ridge and was reported by the Mt. Washburn lookout on July 15. This fire is being suppressed due to dry conditions and the potential of spread. Several hand
crews continue to line the fire and catch spot fires. Helicopter bucket drops will continue as needed. The Specimen Ridge Trail is closed from the junction with the Agate Creek Trail to the Lamar River due to the fire. The fire is 315 acres and is 90% contained.
Pumice Fire: This lightning-caused fire is located approximately 2 miles north of Pumice Point on the west side of Yellowstone Lake and was reported at 1:00 pm on Friday, July 18. Suppression activity was immediately taken and it was declared contained at 7:00 pm on July 20. A crew completed mop-up activities on July 22. It is 4 acres in size.
Arnica Fire: This lightning-caused fire was located near Arnica Creek on the west side of Yellowstone Lake. It was reported on Saturday, July 19 by the Mt. Sheridan lookout and was declared contained upon completion of the July 19 shift. Park staff will continue to monitor. This fire was 0.1 acre.
Boundary Fire: This fire was probably caused by lightning the afternoon of
July 21 and is located in the southwest corner of the park approximately 3 miles south-southeast of Buffalo Lake. The smokejumpers are being demobed on July 23 and another crew has been brought in to continue mop-up activities. This fire is estimated at 2 acres in dense timber.
Today's weather forecast is calling for mostly sunny skies throughout the day. Temperatures will be around 78 to 87 degrees, with relative humidity around 15 to 19 percent. Winds are expected to be 10-15 mph out of the west, with ridge top winds out of the west at 15-20 mph. Generally hot and dry weather conditions are predicted in the long term forecast.
There have been a total of 10 fires during the 2003 fire season - 3 human caused and 7 lightning caused.
Fire restrictions went into effect on July 18. Under the restrictions, the following are prohibited:
1) Backcountry Campfires - lighting, building, maintaining, attending or using a campfire, wood fire, charcoal fire or open fire is prohibited in the backcountry.
2) Smoking - smoking is only permitted within an enclosed vehicle or building (unless otherwise
prohibited), a developed campground site, or while stopped in an area at least three feet in diameter that is barren or cleared of all flammable materials (i.e. parking lots, campsite cooking areas or if surrounded by water).
In developed areas in the park, fires are only allowed in designated fire rings at developed campgrounds. Fires fueled by liquid fuel and LPG fuel are permitted only if used in self-contained appliances.
Baker's Hole Fire: This human-caused fire started approximately 6 miles north of West Yellowstone, east of Highway 191 on the Gallatin National Forest on July 5, and burned to the northeast into Yellowstone National Park. The 506-acre fire was controlled on July 11 and continues to be monitored by Gallatin National Forest crews. This fire was flown on July 20
- no heat or smoke was detected.
Yellowstone Fire Management policy requires that all human-caused fires be suppressed but that natural fires be allowed to burn as long as they do not threaten people, property or resource values. Before any wildland fire is allowed to burn, however, it must be carefully evaluated and meet an inventory of pre-established criteria (including current and forecasted weather and wind conditions, fuel moisture levels, site location data, and sufficient resources). If all criteria are not met on a daily basis, the fire must be reassessed to determine whether it will still be allowed to burn or if it must be immediately suppressed. With the current dry conditions in the park and the lack of any new moisture, each new fire start is being carefully evaluated on a case-by-case basis to determine
whether the appropriate management action will be to suppress or allow new fire starts to burn.
Information provided by the NPS
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