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©
2003 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. |
Fire
rages through forest
A massive wildfire
has raged in the forests west of Sisters since Tuesday afternoon, August
19.
A week after its start, the
Booth Fire has covered 31,630 acres and it will almost certainly continue
burning till snow flies this winter.
The fire broke out in the
late afternoon and was called in at 3:23 p.m. A fire to the north at Bear
Butte in the Mt. Jefferson Wilderness had been called in earlier.
The fires would soon be put
under one management team and called the B&B Complex. The cause of both
fires is listed as unknown and under investigation.
The twin fires sent plumes
of smoke into the blue skies over the Cascades as the blazes rapidly gained
ground in dense forests full of dead timber.
Youth camps and campgrounds
in the area were evacuated Tuesday evening.
By Wednesday morning, the
wind-driven Booth Fire had jumped Highway 20 heading south and was bumping
up against Suttle Lake.
By afternoon, the fire had
grown to 3,000 acres and Highway 20 had been closed between Camp Sherman
on the east and the Santiam Junction to the west. Black Butte Ranch went
on pre-evacuation alert and residents of Camp Sherman were warned that
they could be forced to leave if the fire took off.
And take off it did on Thursday
morning, August 21. By mid-morning, an awesome plume of smoke was billowing
20,000 feet into the skies above Black Butte. At approximately 12:30 p.m.,
the Jefferson County Sheriff, concerned about the rapid, massive growth
of the fire, ordered the evacuation of Camp Sherman.
Evacuees were well-prepared
and the exodus to the Red Cross Shelter at Sisters Elementary School went
smoothly and without incident.
The fire raged along the ridge
south of Suttle Lake, charring the landscape and leaving nothing but blackened
sticks where tall trees had stood.
For awhile, it looked like
the entire lake area would be ravaged.
An intense firefighting effort
by structural task forces from around Oregon saved the camps, campgrounds
and resorts around Suttle and Blue lakes.
The massive blow-up forced
the cancellation of a presidential visit to Camp Sherman.
The fire grew to 8,000 acres,
then more than doubled Thursday night, growing to 20,300 acres.
Firefighters got a break on
Friday, August 24, as rain moved into the area. While little rain fell
on the fire, cooler temperatures and higher humidity allowed firefighters
to make some progress getting containment lines started and burning out
vegetation to rob the fire of fuel.
For the next two days, firefighters
worked night and day to create a perimeter along Forest Road 12 (Jack
Lake Road) to protect Camp Sherman from any eastward advance of the fire.
They also shored up lines
between Suttle Lake and Black Butte Ranch.
As temperatures rose and humidity
dropped on Sunday and Monday, the fire kicked up again, burning especially
fiercely along Highway 20 near Hoodoo Ski Area.
The highway remained closed
and local officials are expecting it to remain closed through the Labor
Day weekend.
The economic impact of the
closure is already being felt in Sisters.
A waitress in a local restaurant
reported that her tip income had dropped by two-thirds and a grocery store
employee said that things had been very slow.
The Sisters Area Chamber of
Commerce was forced to cancel the Western and Native American Arts Festival
scheduled for the weekend.
The highway closure and the
ongoing fire operation didn't allow for an event.
Merchants were left to contemplate
a meager end to the summer tourist season. |
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