Rain calms Burro Fire; bulldozers extend fire lines

Fire reaches 3,751 acres on Saturday; crews work on key areas
The Pike Hotshots, from Colorado Springs, are working to cut down dead trees that might burn and weaken a fire line in the Burro Fire east of Dolores.
The Pike Hotshots, from Colorado Springs, on Friday worked to cut down dead trees that might burn and weaken a fire line in the Burro Fire east of Dolores.
Pike Hotshots, from Colorado Springs, “snag” a forest road, cutting down dead trees that pose a threat to the fire line should the fire reach that far.
A member of the Pike Hotshots, of Colorado Springs, Friday at the Burro Fire.
A Pike Hotshot, from Colorado Springs, bucked a downed tree Friday on a Burro Fire containment line.
The June 16 Burro Fire operations map shows an existing bulldozer line runnning northeast of the fire, and a planned line at Forest Road 561 and the Gold Run Trailhead. After the bulldozer lines are made, firefighters will inginte back-burns to secure the lines and reach containment for the area.
The infrared map derived from a flyover on Friday night shows more intense flames on the northwest and southeast sides of the Burro Fire.
Fire operations manager Jeff Thumm explains the strategy for containing the Burro Fire, which has burned in more than 3,400 acres of the Bear Creek area of the San Juan National Forest 14 miles south of Rico.
A resident expresses concerns about human behavior adding to the fire risk, including finding lit cigarettes on the ground at a fishing area up the Dolores Valley.
At a glance

The Burro Fire, named for a nearby mountain, started June 8 and burns 5 miles up the Bear Creek drainage east of Dolores.

Size of fire: 3,715 acres, with 10 percent containment as of Saturday morning. The fire is expected to burn for weeks. Containment is projected for July 15.


What’s next: Create containment lines on the west and south sides of the fire to keep it from Colorado Highway 145 and the Haycamp Mesa and Transfer Park areas. A bulldozer crew is working to clear a line along with hand crews. Firefighters were scouting for containment opportunities along the north and west sides of the fire.


Closures: The San Juan National Forest is closed to recreation; Mancos State Park is partially closed; Lone Dome and Fish Creek state wildlife areas are closed.


Firefighters: Managed by a Type 1 crew in Dolores along with the larger 416 Fire north of Durango. About 100 personnel are fighting the fire at the scene, and 74 are at the command center in Dolores.


Weather: Cloudy, with light rain on Saturday; 40 percent chance of rain Sunday. Winds 5-15 mph.


The Journal

Related Media
Burro Fire forest closures
Burro operations, June 16
Burro infrared map, June 16

Rain calms Burro Fire; bulldozers extend fire lines

The Pike Hotshots, from Colorado Springs, are working to cut down dead trees that might burn and weaken a fire line in the Burro Fire east of Dolores.
The Pike Hotshots, from Colorado Springs, on Friday worked to cut down dead trees that might burn and weaken a fire line in the Burro Fire east of Dolores.
Pike Hotshots, from Colorado Springs, “snag” a forest road, cutting down dead trees that pose a threat to the fire line should the fire reach that far.
A member of the Pike Hotshots, of Colorado Springs, Friday at the Burro Fire.
A Pike Hotshot, from Colorado Springs, bucked a downed tree Friday on a Burro Fire containment line.
The June 16 Burro Fire operations map shows an existing bulldozer line runnning northeast of the fire, and a planned line at Forest Road 561 and the Gold Run Trailhead. After the bulldozer lines are made, firefighters will inginte back-burns to secure the lines and reach containment for the area.
The infrared map derived from a flyover on Friday night shows more intense flames on the northwest and southeast sides of the Burro Fire.
Fire operations manager Jeff Thumm explains the strategy for containing the Burro Fire, which has burned in more than 3,400 acres of the Bear Creek area of the San Juan National Forest 14 miles south of Rico.
A resident expresses concerns about human behavior adding to the fire risk, including finding lit cigarettes on the ground at a fishing area up the Dolores Valley.