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Nevada Wilderness Burns Unchecked as Feds Watch
Associated Press
August 20, 2008
RENO, NV- While armies of firefighters battle wildland blazes across much of the West, federal crews are watching from the sidelines as a 12-day-old wildfire burns unchecked in a remote wilderness area in the northeast corner of Nevada.
With no immediate threat to people or property, the Forest Service has been content to let nature have its way as the lightning-sparked fire crackles its way through more about five square miles of the Humboldt-Toiyabe National Forest’s Jarbidge Wilderness Area along the Nevada-Idaho line.
Agency officials continue to monitor the fire that’s 15 miles from the nearest town of Jarbidge, and will step in to fight it if any danger arises, said Linda Slater, a public information officer for the National Park Service who is assisting in the interagency effort.
“The safety of firefighters and the public remains the top priority,” she said Wednesday.
But if all goes well, they’re counting on rain or snow to put it out the old fashioned way sometime early this fall.
The management practice called “Wildland Fire Use” is used to manage lightning-caused fires in remote areas where fire is a natural component of the ecosystem, Slater said.
“Right now, they are not putting it out in any place. We have teams in there monitoring the perimeter of the fire and they also fly over it once a day or more to keep track of it,” Slater told The Associated Press.
It’s a very different scene than in Oregon, where 500 firefighters are battling a stubborn fire on Mount Hood; eastern Washington, where 390 personnel are trying to stop a fire that has burned 24 square miles near Davenport; or the Sierra Nevada, where 150 firefighters now have a 650-acre fire in California’s Mono County about 45 percent contained.
So far, the fire in Nevada’s wilderness has burned 3,245 acres primarily through an area dominated by brush, bug-killed and other dead trees. It’s perimeter is expected to grow, but many pockets of green trees within the perimeter remain unburned, she said.
“It is burning very spotty. It is not black from end of the wilderness to the other,” Slater said.
The vast wilderness area, home to the threatened bull trout, covers a total of about 195 square miles. The fire is burning within about a 9-square-mile area that has been closed to public entry near the 10,184-foot God’s Pocket Peak.
“It is a pretty rocky, open area. It is not a densely covered forest. It is a lot of meadow, open area,” Slater said.
For the first time since it ignited on Aug. 8, residents of Jarbidge could see smoke from the fire on Tuesday. But Slater said they aren’t in any immediate danger.
emtffdan
3 months ago
1122 comments
it's hard to imagine that much land with no structures.