9,500 people evacuated and 92 homes destroyed in Colorado Wildfire

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Updated 6/13 at 6:01am

BLACK FOREST — Shifting winds whipped flames through the winding roads and hills of Black Forest on Wednesday, forcing new evacuations and sending a plume of thick smoke across the Front Range.

Dozens of residents received the news they had been dreading: The Black Forest fire had destroyed their homes. Others were left with something almost worse: The agony of not knowing.

“That’s the hardest part, the waiting,” said Sharon Rambo, who shared news with other evacuees in a makeshift trailer park in a Walmart parking lot. “You can’t confirm if your house is there or not, so you can’t move in any direction. You’re just sort of paralyzed.”

Gov. John Hickenlooper declared disaster emergencies related to three wildfires burning in Colorado, with Black Forest being the most destructive.

So far, the fire has prompted the evacuation of nearly 9,500 people, destroyed 92 homes and burned about 8,500 acres, El Paso County Sheriff Terry Maketa said.

All of those numbers were likely to grow, he said, depending on weather. Thursday’s forecast called for shifting, gusty winds, even hotter temperatures and a threat of dry lightning.

“The potential for this fire to spread is extreme,” Maketa said. “We’re throwing everything at this we possibly can.”

Even one of the evacuation centers, New Life Church, had to be evacuated Wednesday because of thick, acrid smoke.

Nearly 500 firefighters were supported by Chinook helicopters and air tankers spreading slurry over Black Forest, north of Colorado Springs. Army, National Guard and Air Force units also pitched in.

Federal fire officials planned to assume command of firefighting operations early Thursday.

No injuries or fatalities have been recorded, although Maketa noted that there were reports of people who refused to evacuate. One person was reported missing.

The cause of the fire is not yet known.

The Red Cross established shelters for evacuees, and

horses, llamas and other large animals were taken to fairgrounds in El Paso and Elbert counties and elsewhere. Hundreds of Boy Scouts and others were evacuated from camps in the area.

 

Bottled water and sports drinks were flying off the shelves of grocery stores as relief groups appealed for supplies for evacuees and first-responders. At one point, an overwhelmed Care and Share Food Bank for Southern Colorado asked people to stop bringing water and Gatorade and to bring snacks instead.

The fire spread northwest and northeast on Wednesday, prompting new evacuations in Elbert County. Colorado Springs sought voluntary evacuations in northern areas. Treacherous winds caused the flames to double back in areas previously spared, and there has been no containment, Maketa said.

Aerial images showed twisting roads and cul-de-sacs lined by blotches of gray ash where houses once stood. On the ground, flames continued to hopscotch through neighborhoods, where the scorched shells of cars and trucks stood where they had been left by fleeing residents. Outside one home, a singed American flag still flew at full-staff.

But the fire also stopped, turned and spared in some areas. A tire swing still dangled from a tree above green grass, while smoke hung over blackened pines and earth just feet away. One car suffered just a melted bumper, while a truck nearby was torched. Two homes seemed untouched, while others on a cul-de-sac were reduced to ashes.

Sally Burr

stood next to her burgundy car on Wednesday afternoon as it idled along a stretch of Colorado 83 and peered east toward a ridge where flames from the fire were visible.

 

“Twenty-five years we’ve lived in a home over there, raised our two daughters and our son,” said Burr, as she pointed toward the large plume of smoke rising in the afternoon sun. “And now it could very well be gone.”

She and her husband were at their home babysitting their grandchildren when they smelled smoke.

“We recently built a new garage, and we laid the concrete (Tuesday) and had the grandkids place their hands and feet in the cement, so it could be something they remember,” Burr said. “The winds picked up, and we had a whiff of smoke. Then, all of

Blackened and charred homes are seen along Herring Road in the Black Forest area northeast of Colorado Springs on June 12, 2013. (Helen H. Richardson, The Denver Post)

a sudden, we received a notice to evacuate. … It was all very fast.”

 

Burr and her husband, Bill, were unable to corral the horse they own on their five-acre parcel of land.

“It’s sad — but we have each other and our grandkids are safe,” she said. “You live out here in the country and you know the risks of wildfire, but still, you just don’t imagine it happening to you.”

Brad Dombaugh has lived in the Cathedral Pines subdivision in Black Forest for a little more than four years and as the black smoke billowed from the blaze Wednesday afternoon, the emotion that comes with the destruction of a wildfire could be heard in his voice.

“Every time the black smoke shoots up like that, it’s got to be a house,” said Dombaugh, his voice cracking. “It’s just gut-wrenching to know that could easily have been my house.”

Dombaugh was in Vail on Tuesday when the evacuation notice came.

“I just rushed back as fast as I could, but it was too late. … I couldn’t get back to my house,” he said. “But I’m not the only one in this position. Everyone feels empty who lives in the area.”

Darrell and Jennifer Fortner lived on Nelson Street, one block south of Swan. All they salvaged was a scorched bucket truck from their fire-mitigation and tree service. They had lived in the house 20 years.

Darrell said he learned his home was gone late Tuesday from a neighbor who used a tractor to tear down trees in a vain attempt to save it. The neighbor lost his home, too.

“I’m a little blank right now,” Darrell said.

“I’m just numb,” Jennifer said. “We lost everything.”

James Pursell, executive director of Farmer’s Insurance in Colorado, said evacuees who lost their homes were seeking help before his staff had time to setup a mobile office in Black Forest.

“We had a dozen people come by within the first 20 minutes,” he said.

Against official orders, David Stanley, 40, ventured onto the property he shares with relatives on Pinery Drive because he had to know: Was it still there?

On a dirt bike, he got closer. The once-plush neighborhood was skeletal and dead. Trailers had melted into streams of molten metal. An 8,000-square-foot brick home was a pile of rubble.

“As we got closer, I knew my house was going to be gone,” Stanley said.

But there it was, a spot of color peeking out from the char. The fire had stopped at his fence.

“Every house around our property was to the ground but ours. … It was like a little sanctuary. It didn’t get touched. It’s phenomenal,” he said, flipping through photos on his computer.

“I’m not a religious person, but it makes you wonder,” Stanley said.

Stanley said that from his vantage point, the sheriff’s damage estimates were low.

“There’s no way there’s less than 300 houses destroyed,” he said.

Sadie Gurman: 303-954-1661, sgurman@denverpost.com or twitter.com/sgurman

 


 

How to help

 

If you would like to help those lives the Black Forest fire has disrupted, you can:

• Donate portable food. Care and Share Food Bank for Southern Colorado, 2605 Preamble Point, Colorado Springs, is seeking donations of energy bars, snacks, and canned and boxed foods. The food bank was overwhelmed by donations of water and Gatorade on Wednesday. The number there is 719-528-1247.

• Donate hay to the animal shelters at Penrose Equestrian Shelter, Flying W Ranch, the El Paso County Fairgrounds and the Elbert County Fairgrounds.

• Volunteer at the Humane Society of the Pikes Peak region. Call 719-473-1741 to volunteer.

• Call the El Paso County Disaster Recovery Center for further requests and inquiries at 719-444-8301.

 

 

BLACK FOREST, Colo. — Four wildfires burning across the state Wednesday have destroyed dozens of homes and forced thousands to evacuate, including 900 inmates from a state prison.

One fire might affect plans for a temporary installation along the Arkansas River in south-central Colorado that has been envisioned by the artists Christo and Jeanne-Claude.

Near Colorado Springs, El Paso County Sheriff Terry Maketa said Wednesday afternoon that the Black Forest Fire had destroyed 80 to 100 homes and that he feared there may be fatalities.

There were no immediate reports of deaths or injuries, however.

Maketa said that about 2,300 homes, affecting about 6,400 people, had been evacuated and that 7,500 acres had burned since the blaze began Tuesday. It was 0% contained, and strong southerly winds were rapidly expanding the fire’s northern edge, The Gazettereported. Firefighters had to be pulled back to safety, and five air tankers were en route.

Record-high temperatures and strong winds were making containment efforts difficult.

Six helicopters and an air tanker were already working the fire, Maketa said.

The Black Forest area, named for its thick growth of Ponderosa Pines, is not far from last summer’s devastating Waldo Canyon Fire that destroyed 346 homes and killed two.

“It’s very, very reminiscent of what we experienced in Waldo Canyon,” Maketa said.

The fire was one of several burning across the state, including one near Royal Gorge Bridge that had destroyed three structures, burned 3,800 acres and forced evacuation of more than 900 inmates from “Old Max,” the Territorial Prison in Cañon City.

Department of Corrections spokeswoman Adrienne Jacobson said inmates were taken to other prisons overnight as a precaution because of the danger from heavy smoke. The fire had not reached the prison.

Some highways were closed amid flames reported as high as 30 feet. Evacuations were underway.

“The wildfire is still creating some havoc,” said Bob Wilson, a spokesman for the Colorado Department of Transportation told TheGazette.

“It’s moving really quick,” Brandi Grandon, 43, told The Gazette as she prepared to evacuate her home a half mile from the nearest flames. “This is horrifying.”

The Arkansas River is closed from Spike Buck to Canon City, the U.S. Bureau of Land Management said, and the Royal Gorge Bridge and Park were evacuated. The fire started on the south side of the river and is now burning both sides.

It is too early to know whether the wildfire will affect or alter the grand-but-temporary art installation that Christo has been planning along the Arkansas River between Salida and Canon City.

His Over The River creation, which he conceived with his late wife, Jeanne-Claude, is to involve suspending 5.9 miles of silvery, translucent fabric panels along the 42-mile stretch of the river for two weeks. The panels “will be suspended at eight distinct areas of the river that have been selected by the artists for their aesthetic merits and technical viability,” the artists stated in their FAQ.

Work was to have begun in February, but Christo announced last July that he would delay the installation until lawsuits and appeals were settled. USA TODAY is seeking comment from the artist.

Live video: https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2013/06/12/colorado-wildfires-homes-burn/2414269/

1 COMMENT

  1. Dewey I think our windom friend jan riebe lives right in that area. she had posted some pics early on yesterday and have heard from her now.. so I praying her place is safe and she is just evacuated.

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