Posts Tagged Minnesota wildfires

Smoke smell permeates northern Illinois – update

Although the smoke smell and haze which was prevalent throughout northern Illinois yesterday seems to have subsided, Wildfire Today has an interesting follow-up to the fire which has grown to over 100,000 acres and is now resulting in evacuations. An interesting note in the article mentions that the “… fire that started in the Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness (BWCAW) and was not suppressed for about two weeks …”

the largest fire in Minnesota since 1918. The Pagami Creek fire has burned 100,000 acres, according to the incident management team, and forced evacuations on the south and east sides of the fire. Scroll down to see maps of the fire.

It started from a lightning strike on August 18 and by August 30 had burned approximately 13 acres.

The staff at the BWCAW and the Superior National Forest decided to monitor it and allow natural processes to run their course. They conducted some firing operations, burning an additional 2,000 acres, to herd the fire away from populated areas on the north and west sides, but by last weekend it was obvious that they needed to suppress it.

Read the entire article HERE.

 

 

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Smoke smell permeates northern Illinois

Residents throughout Lake, Cook, McHenry, and Dupage counties called area fire departments today reporting a smoke smell in their respective areas. Initially, many fire departments responded and could not determine the origin of the smell. It has been reported that wildfires in northern Minnesota are the culprit.

Wildfiretoday.com published the following:

The Associated Press is reporting 60,000 acres, a figure which apparently came from Minnesota Interagency Fire Center spokeswoman Jean Bergerson Tuesday morning.InciWeb, which at times has been having problems today, was updated at noon on Tuesday with this information:

Yesterday, a finger of the Pagami Creek Fire made an unprecedented 16 mile run to the east, reaching the edge of Polly Lake. The fire became a plume-driven event and reached in excess of 60,000 acres. Residents were evacuated from 36 addresses along the portion of the Cramer Road/Lake County Road 7 from Kawishiwi Lake south to the Wanless Road (Forest Road 172) and along the Wanless Road west from the junction with the Cramer Road to Homestead Lake. Winds are expected to be strong and out of the northwest and west again today with little or no precipitation expected.

The blowup was caused by 15-20 mph west and northwest winds on Monday that gusted up to 35 mph pushing the fire approximately 16 miles to the east. The National Weather Service is predicting strong northwest winds again on Tuesday of 18 mph gusting to 28 along with a relative humidity of 37%. But between 2 and 6 p.m. there is a 45 percent chance of showers. Tuesday’s high temperature will be 60 in Ely, but on Wednesday it will cool off quite a bit with a high of only 46, with winds of 14 mph gusting to 18.

The Pagami Creek fire is the largest in the state since the Ham Lake fire burned over 76,000 acres in Minnesota and Ontario in May 2007, destroying 163 structures near Gunflint Trail.

A very thorough article can be found HERE at Wildfire Today.

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