Most Lake Shore fire evacuations lifted

Fueled by high heat and dry conditions, major wildfires continued to burn across thousands of acres of wildland near Boulder, Loveland, Lyons and in Jefferson County on Wednesday, killing at least one person and destroying at least five homes.

Gov. Jared Polis called up the Colorado National Guard on Wednesday morning to assist with the fires, the first activation for a wildfire since the Marshall fire.

National Guard members will begin helping with logistics, road closures and other tasks that will free up fire officials and firefighters, Polis said in a briefing Wednesday afternoon.

Polis also declared disaster emergencies for multiple fires on Tuesday, which activates a state emergency operations plan and directs state officials to “take all necessary and appropriate actions to assist with response, recovery and mitigation efforts” in the fires.

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Thick smoke from the Lakeshore fire can be seen near the entrance of Flagstaff Road in Boulder, Colorado on Wednesday, July 31, 2024. (Photo by Zachary Spindler-Krage/The Denver Post)
Thick smoke from the Lake Shore fire can be seen near the entrance of Flagstaff Road in Boulder on Wednesday, July 31, 2024. (Photo by Zachary Spindler-Krage/The Denver Post)

Lake Shore fire near Gross Reservoir

Last updated at 7:40 p.m.

  • Access the latest evacuation map here

Crews have surrounded the 6-acre Lake Shore wildfire with fire retardant and feel “comfortable” with the progress made since the blaze began burning near Gross Reservoir in Boulder County around 2:30 p.m., officials said in an update Wednesday evening.

Fire officials are talking to two people they believe accidentally started the fire on Lakeshore Park Road near Gross Reservoir, 10 miles southwest of Boulder, Boulder County Sheriff Curtis Johnson said at a briefing.

No arrests have been made and investigators are still determining what started the fire, though Johnson said the two people were working on a property in the area.

County officials lifted mandatory evacuations just before 6 p.m. for all neighborhoods except the Lake Shore neighborhood north of the reservoir.

One home and one other structure were “impacted” by the fire, Mountain View Fire Rescue spokesperson Rick Tillery said. The agency cannot confirm whether the structures were destroyed until firefighters can access the area, but live helicopter footage from 9News showed a home destroyed by the fire.

“Hopefully we will keep it at 5 to 6 acres and get it knocked down today,” Johnson said.

Johnson said he could not announce containment information until fire crews were more confident the fire would not continue to spread.

Roads closed for firefighting operations include westbound Flagstaff Road from the Mountain View Fire Rescue station to Gross Dam Road and Lake Shore Drive beginning at Gross Dam Road.

County officials set up an evacuation point at the county building at 1333 Iris Ave. in north Boulder.


As beachgoers relax in the water an air tanker skims the waters of Chatfield Reservoir while refilling for the aerial fire fight against the Quarry fire in Jefferson County just west of Chatfield Reservoir on Wednsday, July 31, 2024. (Photo by Eric Lutzens/The Denver Post)
As beachgoers relax in the water an air tanker skims the waters of Chatfield Reservoir while refilling for the aerial fire fight against the Quarry fire in Jefferson County just west of Chatfield Reservoir on Wednsday, July 31, 2024. (Photo by Eric Lutzens/The Denver Post)

Quarry fire near Deer Creek Canyon

  • Access the latest evacuation map here

Last updated at 8 p.m.

The Quarry fire is burning on 341 acres in Jefferson County near Deer Creek Canyon Park and still growing, fire officials said Wednesday night.

Air support reached Jefferson County just before noon Wednesday, with four helicopters and a large air tanker working to douse the Quarry fire with water and fire retardant.

Nearly 600 homes in Jefferson County were evacuated overnight Wednesday after a wildfire broke out near Deer Creek Canyon and more evacuations could be on the way, sheriff’s officials said.

“Everything is stacked against us,” Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office spokesperson Mark Techmeyer said in a Wednesday morning briefing. “We’ve got low resources, we’ve got treacherous terrain, we’ve got very flammable fuel.”

Techmeyer said crews from more than a dozen fire agencies responded to Jefferson County on Wednesday, but the two other major fires burning near Lyons and Loveland have spread Colorado’s fire resources thin.

“We’re still in the woods,” he said Wednesday afternoon after air support arrived. “We’ve still got a long way to go.”

Currently, fire crews and aircraft in Jefferson County are working to suppress the fire. If the flames spread to any of the evacuated neighborhoods, Techmeyer said the focus will switch to protecting those homes.

No homes or critical infrastructure has been damaged as of Wednesday afternoon, according to fire officials.

The cause of the fire remains unknown.

Evacuations started just before midnight Tuesday when sheriff’s officials announced mandatory evacuations for the Deer Creek Mesa, Sampson and Maxwell subdivisions southwest of Ken Caryl.

County officials said the fire was discovered by a sheriff’s deputy around 9 p.m. and was moving southeast. The fire bloomed from a 10-foot section to the size of 37 football fields in less than an hour.

By 1 a.m. Wednesday, 300 homes in the three subdivisions were being evacuated as deputies and firefighters knocked on doors and sent out emergency alerts, sheriff’s officials said.

As the fire continued to grow overnight, sheriff’s officials announced mandatory evacuations for another 275 homes in the McKinney and Murphy subdivisions.

“Every neighborhood in this area is at risk,” Techmeyer said during the Wednesday afternoon briefing. “This fire is not an easy fight. … There’s not one [neighborhood] that’s in immediate danger, they all are.”

Techmeyer said the terrain is treacherous for firefighters — steep, rocky areas filled with debris, fallen trees and rattlesnake nests make it difficult for ground crews to fight the flames.

Multiple agencies responded to the late-night blaze, including crews from West Metro Fire Rescue, South Metro Fire Rescue, Inter-Canyon Fire, the North Folk Fire Department and Jefferson County Open Space.

As of Wednesday night, 75 firefighters were working on the ground to fight the flames.  No injuries have been reported and no homes have been lost, Techmeyer said.

Silver Ranch and Silver Ranch South remain on pre-evacuation orders.

At the Dakota Ridge High School, the wildfire’s evacuation site, John Banks coughed in the parking lot as smoke from the fire threatening his neighborhood hung heavily in the air.

Quarry Fire evacuee John Banks answers a phone call from the evacuation center at Dakota Ridge High School in Jefferson County on Wednesday, July 31, 2024. Banks and his wife and cat had to evacuate from the Watson Gulch area early Wednesday morning. (Photo by Andy Cross/ The Denver Post)
Quarry Fire evacuee John Banks answers a phone call from the evacuation center at Dakota Ridge High School in Jefferson County on Wednesday, July 31, 2024. Banks and his wife and cat had to evacuate from the Watson Gulch area early Wednesday morning. (Photo by Andy Cross/ The Denver Post)

Banks and his wife, Diane, fled the Quarry fire early Wednesday after a 1:30 a.m. phone call ordered them to evacuate.

The couple slept in their car overnight with their rescue cat, Mea, and the few items they scooped from their home after the evacuation call: medications, some clothes, John’s oxygen tanks and cancer medications, and Mea’s food and litter.

They left everything else behind in the home where they’ve lived for 34 years.

“These are just things,” said Banks, 78.

He paused, emotion creeping into his voice.

“If you lose things, you still have your friends, your family.”

The couple found a hotel to stay in for the next night and planned to spend Wednesday going to pre-scheduled doctor appointments.

“Life throws spitballs at you,” John Banks said. “But you keep going.”

When the couple arrived at the evacuation center at Dakota Ridge High School at 3 a.m. Wednesday, they were one of the first people to arrive.

Quarry Fire evacuee Elden Coombs waits in the shade at the evacuation center at Dakota Ridge High School in Jefferson County on Wednesday, July 31, 2024. Coombs had to evacuate from the Homewood Park area. (Photo by Andy Cross/ The Denver Post)
Quarry fire evacuee Elden Coombs waits in the shade at the evacuation center at Dakota Ridge High School in Jefferson County on Wednesday, July 31, 2024. Coombs had to evacuate from the Homewood Park area. (Photo by Andy Cross/ The Denver Post)

By 9 a.m., dozens of cars were parked at the school — some of the nearly 600 households ordered to evacuate from the Quarry fire. A few evacuees took time to walk their dogs. In the next lot over, a Denver Fire Department crew suited up to respond to the fire.

Elden Coombs, 85, sat with his neighbors in the parking lot waiting for news. He moved to the Homewood Park neighborhood in 1969 and has lived through two other fires, a blizzard and two floods.

He left his home after getting the evacuation call at about 2 a.m. He grabbed some clothes, important documents and his medicine and fled.

“I haven’t been to bed,” he said. “I just hope they get the fire under control.”

Coombs didn’t know where he would go next, if he couldn’t go home. Authorities told him the evacuation could last days.


A home off Stone Canyon Road appears almost entirely burnt down by the Stone Canyon fire near Lyons on Wednesday, July 31, 2024. (Photo by Zachary Spindler-Krage/The Denver Post)
A home off Stone Canyon Road appears almost entirely burned down by the Stone Canyon fire near Lyons on Wednesday, July 31, 2024. (Photo by Zachary Spindler-Krage/The Denver Post)

Stone Canyon fire near Lyons

  • Access the latest evacuation map here

Last updated at 7:30 p.m.

Firefighters gained 20% containment on the 1,548-acre Stone Canyon fire as of Wednesday night, Boulder County officials said in an update.

Fire crews will continue to work overnight and air support will resume dropping water and fire retardant on the slow-moving fire Thursday, fire officials said.

One person was killed, four firefighters were injured and five homes were charred in the wildfire burning near Lyons, fire officials said Wednesday.

People who lost homes in the fire have been notified, but sheriff’s officials declined to release where those homes were located.

What started Tuesday afternoon as a small, 30-acre fire near Lyons quickly grew to more than 1,500 acres, forcing evacuations, fire officials said.

As of 2 p.m. Wednesday, the Stone Canyon fire in Boulder County had burned around 1,548 acres.

The fire has not seen significant growth Wednesday, Johnson said. He declined to release further details about the person who died and said investigators were at the home where human remains were found. Sheriff’s officials are not aware of any other missing persons reports at this time.

Mandatory evacuation orders were sent out less than an hour after the fire was reported Tuesday and quickly expanded into Larimer County, fire officials said. Shifting winds and the fire’s quick spread forced evacuations in the town of Lyons later that afternoon.

 

Boulder County sheriff's Sgt. Cody Sears talks to Matthew Lee about his decision to remain in his home and not evacuate despite the incoming Stone Canyon fire near Lyons on Wednesday, July 31, 2024. In the back, a plane drops red slurry near the plume of the fire. (Photo by Zachary Spindler-Krage/The Denver Post)
Boulder County sheriff’s Sgt. Cody Sears talks to Matthew Lee about his decision to remain in his home and not evacuate despite the incoming Stone Canyon fire near Lyons on Wednesday, July 31, 2024. In the back, a plane drops red slurry near the plume of the fire. (Photo by Zachary Spindler-Krage/The Denver Post)

As the winds shifted Wednesday — and the fire started moving northeast — the Boulder County Sheriff’s Office lifted the evacuation orders for Lyons and Steamboat Mountain.

Johnson said the sheriff’s office doesn’t anticipate any more immediate evacuations in or around Lyons, and that the office is working on a plan to get people back into their homes as the fire winds down.

Johnson said it’s difficult to tell exactly how many buildings have been affected by the fire because there’s a large number of outbuildings — including barns and sheds — in the area that have been destroyed.

Air support stopped overnight, but planes and helicopters took to the sky again Wednesday morning.

Johnson said the Boulder County fire will continue to share resources with the Alexander Mountain fire as air teams are directed where they can be most effective.


“The conditions are about as bad as they can be to fight this fire,” Johnson said in a briefing Tuesday afternoon. “I expect it will take days for us to be able to really manage it.”

At Hygiene Feed and Mercantile southeast of Lyons, owner Jay French said evacuees came in to buy feed for displaced animals Wednesday morning. He watched the fire from his store as temperatures rose above 80 degrees around 9 a.m.

“I cannot see flames. I can see smoke,” he said. “It looks like the wind is still low at this point because it is billowing straight up.”

The wildfire is burning on land just 8 miles south of the Alexander Mountain fire, but fire officials said they are hopeful the two blazes will not connect.

About 70 firefighters and multiple aircraft worked to slow the fire down Tuesday and protect both structures and people in the area, according to fire officials. Several aircraft were on the scene within minutes after being diverted from the Alexander Mountain fire to the north.

Rough boundaries of the mandatory evacuation zone Wednesday include Bear Trap Gulch and Cattle Drive Road in Larimer County to the north; Rabbit Mountain and Carter Lake Reservoir to the east; Indian Mountain and U.S. 36 in Lyons to the south; and Elk Ridge and the end of Hell Canyon Road to the west.

Firefighters douse flames with water near a home being threatened by the Stone Canyon Fire near Lyons on Wednesday, July 31, 2024. (Photo by Zachary Spindler-Krage/The Denver Post)
Firefighters douse flames with water near a home being threatened by the Stone Canyon fire near Lyons on Wednesday, July 31, 2024. (Photo by Zachary Spindler-Krage/The Denver Post)

“If people could just be mindful about local orders and (fire) restrictions, that would really help us a lot,” said Boulder County sheriff’s spokesman Vinnie Montez. “It’s very dry.”

As of Wednesday morning, Boulder County officials had sent mandatory evacuation notices to 2,286 contacts, the sheriff’s office said.

Contacts do not equal the number of people evacuated because households may have one or multiple contacts on file with the county’s emergency alert system and not everyone contacted chose to leave the area, according to sheriff’s officials.

Several roads are closed in the area Wednesday morning for firefighting efforts, including Blue Mountain Road, Steamboat Valley Road, Stone Canyon Drive, Nolan Drive and North 53rd Street.

The Federal Emergency Management Agency approved funding Wednesday to support firefighting costs in Boulder and Larimer counties.

“At the time of the request for assistance with the Stone Canyon Fire, the fire was threatening more than 480 homes and other structures as well as roads, bridges, infrastructure and utilities,” FEMA officials said in a news release. “Two structures have been destroyed and injuries have been sustained by four firefighters.”

The federal organization will fund up to 75% of the state’s firefighting costs. The grant does not help individual home or business owners and does not cover other infrastructure damage.


Firefighters work on fighting the Alexander Mountain Fire that continues to burn near Sylvan Dale Ranch west of Loveland on July 30, 2024. (Photo by Helen H. Richardson/The Denver Post)
Firefighters work on fighting the Alexander Mountain fire that continues to burn near Sylvan Dale Ranch west of Loveland on July 30, 2024. (Photo by Helen H. Richardson/The Denver Post)

Alexander Mountain fire near Loveland

  • Access the latest evacuation map here

Last updated at 2 p.m.

The Alexander Mountain fire raced across nearly 7,000 acres of national forest and private land near Loveland on Wednesday, fueled by high temperatures and low humidity, fire officials said.

As of 2 p.m. Wednesday, the fire was burning on 6,840 acres in the Arapaho and Roosevelt National Forests and on private land north of U.S. 34, according to U.S. Forest Service officials. Monday night, officials had estimated flames had charred 950 acres.

Fire officials issued new mandatory evacuations for the area of Dunraven Glade along County Road 43 at 1:23 p.m. Wednesday, including Streamside Drive and Dunraven Glade Road. The evacuation area extends north past Miller Fork Road and Dunraven Trailhead. The area was previously under a voluntary evacuations, but residents should now evacuate immediately.

Officials also issued a voluntary evacuation order for residents in Glen Haven and west toward Dark Mountain at 4:24 p.m.

Fire officials are concerned about protecting the community of Cedar Park and keeping the fire from jumping over U.S. 34, Incident Commander Mike Smith said in a briefing Wednesday afternoon.

A CH-47D Chinook helicopter ripples the water with its rotor blades, creating a rainbow as it reloads with water at Green Ridge Glade Reservoir, while another helicopter passes in the background to help fight the Alexander Mountain fire west of Loveland on Tuesday, July 30, 2024. (Photo by Zachary Spindler-Krage/The Denver Post)
A CH-47D Chinook helicopter ripples the water with its rotor blades, creating a rainbow as it reloads with water at Green Ridge Glade Reservoir, while another helicopter passes in the background to help fight the Alexander Mountain fire west of Loveland on Tuesday, July 30, 2024. (Photo by Zachary Spindler-Krage/The Denver Post)

“An east wind is pushing the fire off of Palisade Mountain and toward the community of Cedar Park,” Smith said. “We’re actively engaged and trying to do what we can, but we know it’s going to be a tough couple of days for us.”

Approximately 70% of the fire is burning on federal land and 30% is burning on private land, Gov. Jared Polis said in a briefing Wednesday afternoon.

The Federal Emergency Management Agency approved funding Wednesday to support firefighting costs in Boulder and Larimer counties.

“At the time of the request for assistance with the Alexander Mountain Fire, it was threatening more than 2,000 homes and other structures, and is also threatening roads, bridges, infrastructure, utilities and watersheds,” FEMA officials said Wednesday. “The fire … has burned more than 5,000 acres of federal and private land, prompting mandatory evacuations for more than 4,000 people.”

The federal organization will fund up to 75% of the state’s firefighting costs. The grant does not help individual home or business owners and does not cover other infrastructure damage.


“With the low relative humidities overnight, we really saw the fire continue to burn throughout the night,” incident commander Mike Smith said in a briefing Tuesday.

Dry fuels, high temperatures and low humidity continued throughout the day Wednesday, making firefighting conditions difficult and fueling the spread of the flames, according to forest officials.

Wednesday afternoon, the Roosevelt National Forest closed parts of the forest near the Alexander Mountain fire to the public. The closure area included all forest land starting at U.S. 34, approximately 8 miles west of Loveland.

Forest roads — including Franz, Cedar Park, Storm Mountain Branch and Spruce Mountain loop — and trails — including Round Mountain Trail and Round Mountain Nature Trail — were also closed Wednesday, Roosevelt National Forest officials said.

Fire officials said they still don’t know what sparked the fire Monday morning, and crews have been unable to make a map of the wildfire’s footprint because of how quickly it’s changing. There was no containment as of Wednesday afternoon.

Fire activity is expected to increase throughout the day Wednesday as hot, dry and windy weather continues, according to a morning update.

According to Smith, the biggest concern for fire crews Wednesday is Cedar Grove and Cedar Park.

“It’s a tough place to fight fire,” Smith said in a Wednesday afternoon update. “It’s one way in, one way out. We’re doing what we can. … We’ve done a bunch of structure protection up there, preparing the structures to have the best chance possible to survive a fire environment.”

Thousands of evacuation orders have been issued.

The rough boundaries of the mandatory evacuation zone include Storm Mountain to the north, Devil’s Backbone Open Space to the east, Indian Mountain to the south and Dunraven Trailhead to the west.

The blaze primarily grew to the west, north and east Tuesday in the National Forests, and shifting winds began pushing the fire farther north, fire officials said. The fire has not yet jumped U.S. 34 to the south and officials hope rocky terrain will slow down the fire’s growth.

According to Smith, fire scars to the north of the blaze are expected to slow down the fire Wednesday because of a lack of fuel in the area.

Smith said the fire had already moved into the Bobcat fire burn scar and crews saw an immediate decrease in fire behavior and growth in that area. He said the fire is expected to reach the Cameron fire burn scar Wednesday afternoon or evening, slowing the flames even more.

The biggest concern about fire growth lies on the blaze’s western border, Smith said Wednesday.

No structures have been confirmed as damaged or destroyed in the Alexander Mountain fire, and no injuries have been reported as of Wednesday morning.


Currant Creek fire near Cedaredge

Last updated at 1:30 p.m.

The Currant Creek fire burning in Delta County about 5 miles east of Cedaredge has charred more than 180 acres, fire officials said Wednesday.

The fire was first reported Saturday around 2 p.m., “at which time it was growing rapidly and aggressively,” fire officials said. By the time firefighters arrived, it was already 80 acres, or about the size of 60 football fields.

Grasses and brush — including juniper, sage and oak trees — fueled the fire and allowed it to quickly grow to 192 acres, or 145 football fields, fire officials said.

Shortly after fire crews arrived, a thunderstorm doused the fire area with heavy rain and hail, slowing the growth of the flames and making the fire easier for firefighters to tackle, fire officials said.

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