Crews battling the Burro Fire on Saturday received help from a light rain, and reported progress on bulldozing containment lines in the key northwestern and southwestern sectors of the fire.
The fire lay down during the night but continued to burn slowly in the Bear Creek drainage area. Smoke was minimal, said public information officer Donnie Davis.
The fire was at 3,751 acres on Saturday, up from 3,484 acres on Friday. It was moving northeast and southeast in mountainous, heavily timbered country at 9,000 to 11,000 feet in elevation.
Containment remained at 10 percent.
The fire was projected to spread to the northeast and south-southeast in the next 24 hours, according to an update at inciweb. The fire’s growth yesterday was attributed to high winds related to Hurricane Bud, and continued to creep within the valleys and ridges.
A flash flood watch remained in place until midnight Saturday, with up to an inch of rain forecast for the mountains and a half-inch in the valleys. High temperatures were expected to be in the mid-60s. Scattered showers were expected to continue through Sunday afternoon, and warmer, drier weather was expected on Monday.
Bulldozer crews focused their efforts Saturday on the fire’s west side to clear a bulldozer line southward near the junction of Forest Road 561 and the Gold Run Trailhead.
Operational plans also called for extending a bulldozer line that runs northwest roughly paralleling Forest Road 561, west of the more intense flames at Little Bear Trail.
After the lines are complete, firefighters will ignite back-burns to secure the line and attain containment for the area, Davis said.
The fire was projected to spread to the northeast and south-southeast in the next 24 hours, according to an update at inciweb.
A bulldozer crew has created a 2.5-mile firebreak along the southwest edge of Bear Creek Canyon, a site that The Journal toured last Sunday. Crews hope to prevent the fire from moving west and southwest toward Haycamp Mesa and Transfer Park, and northwest toward the Dolores River and Colorado Highway 145, where there are residences and businesses.
“We got some solid lines built on the southern end at Bear Creek,” Andy Lyon, public information officer for the Rocky Mountain Incident Management Team, said on Friday night.
Crews also have considered drawing a containment line on Morrison Trail (610), east of Haycamp Mesa. Aspen groves, which do not burn as quickly as mixed conifer, also were considered as part of the northwestern fire line.
The northeast sector of the fire was not staffed on Saturday. Fire operation managers have said that trying to stop the fire from going northeast is not practical because of the heavy timber, dry conditions, limited water and rugged terrain. If the fire makes a significant run to the northeast, it would trigger additional resources to defend the town of Rico, said fire operations manager Jeff Thumm said.
About 175 firefighters and crews were working on the fire – about 100 at the scene and 75 at the incident command center in Dolores High School, said Davis, a public information officer from Virginia.
On Thursday night in Dolores, forest and fire officials and Montezuma County Sheriff Steve Nowlin encouraged a crowd at the Dolores Community Center to be patient because the wildfire was expected to burn for weeks.
“It is going to take extended monsoons to put this fire out,” said Thumm.
“We can herd the fire to avoid value areas, but it will take weather to put it out,” Dan Dallas, incident commander for the Burro Fire, said on Thursday night. “Monsoons will likely put it out, but if not, we will have a line around it until it burns out or the snows hit.”
To protect private property nearest the fire on the southwest and northwest, fire officials said they are establishing trigger points for calling in additional resources and a Ready Set Go system for evacuation.
“We’re at the ‘be ready’ stage,” Thumm said. “We are establishing trigger points so if the fire gets to a certain point near property, we call in what we need to protect those structures.”
Residences in the region of the fire have been identified, and fire specialists are contacting owners about structure protection plans, risks, possible evacuation and fire mitigation. Nowlin urged everyone to begin thinking about possible evacuation.
“Have a plan, gather important documents, medications and valuables in a bag, You should be ready to go at a moment’s notice. Do not forget your pets, have a plan for your livestock,” he said.
“How much notice will we have?” asked a guest ranch owner, who has dozens of horses near the fire.
Fire officials said they would give as much notice as possible, but because wildfires can be unpredictable, residents could get a day or only an hour to evacuate.
Journal reporter Jim Mimiaga contributed to this article.