The Bureau of Land Management (BLM) High Desert District is making significant progress on the 6,671 acre Bear Mountain Complex, comprised of the Ferris and Seminoe wildfires, 30 miles northeast of Rawlins, Wyo.
The Ferris fire has burned an estimated 2,842 acres of grass, sagebrush, and mixed conifer trees with heavy pine beetle kill since July 27. The fire is located in very steep, rugged terrain on BLM, state and private lands on Ferris Mountain, including the Ferris Wilderness Study Area, and continues to creep and smolder with interior single and group tree torching. Effective burnout operations on the east and northeast perimeters increased the fire’s containment to 47 percent. The cause of the fire remains under investigation.
The lightning-caused Seminoe fire has burned approximately 3,829 acres of grass, sagebrush, juniper, and ponderosa pine on BLM, Bureau of Reclamation, state and private lands since July 21. It is 100 percent contained and the road closure on Carbon County Road 351 has been lifted.
The Ferris fire has burned an estimated 2,842 acres of grass, sagebrush, and mixed conifer trees with heavy pine beetle kill since July 27. The fire is located in very steep, rugged terrain on BLM, state and private lands on Ferris Mountain, including the Ferris Wilderness Study Area, and continues to creep and smolder with interior single and group tree torching. Effective burnout operations on the east and northeast perimeters increased the fire’s containment to 47 percent. The cause of the fire remains under investigation.
The lightning-caused Seminoe fire has burned approximately 3,829 acres of grass, sagebrush, juniper, and ponderosa pine on BLM, Bureau of Reclamation, state and private lands since July 21. It is 100 percent contained and the road closure on Carbon County Road 351 has been lifted.
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