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©
2002 Display
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contents of the on-line edition of The Nugget represent a selection
among the stories that appear in the weekly print edition. |
Blazes
are a fire season warning Tollgate
residents got a reminder of just how immediate fire danger can be on Saturday
afternoon, June 28, when a small blaze erupted between the subdivision and
Highway 20 to the north.
Fire crews responded quickly
and got a wet line around the blaze, which burned about 260 yards north
of the houses on the Conestoga cul-de-sac.
Winds were low and the blaze
held low to the ground, burning about 1/4 acre.
Still, it was an eye-opening
experience for residents, as law enforcement officers visited surrounding
houses to warn them of the situation. The officers could have initiated
an evacuation if the fire had blown up.
According to Travis Moyer
of the Oregon Department of Forestry, the blaze was caused by a cigarette.
Residents breathed a sigh
of relief, only to start coughing on the pall of smoke from the Davis
Lake fire southwest of La Pine. Though smoke was much lighter in Sisters
than it was in Bend and Redmond, the dense cloud on the horizon was a
reminder that summer heat and increased human activity in the woods make
for extreme fire danger.
Another cigarette-sparked
blaze flared up west of Sisters near the head of Jack Creek. Fire units
from all around Sisters mobilized quickly, though they were able to stand
down as it became apparent that the fire was under control.
The quick and heavy response
was indicative of how seriously fire agencies are taking the potential
for a conflagration.
The Jack Creek fire was doused
at only 1/10th of an acre, Moyer said. |
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