Skip to main content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Here's how you know

Incident Media Photographs

Zoom to your location
Reset map zoom and position

Could not determine your location.

Clearwater

Unit Information

808 Meadow Lane Avenue 
Cody, 
Wyoming 
82414 
808 Meadow Lane Avenue 
Cody, 
Wyoming 
82414 

Incident Contacts

Photographs Gallery

A member of the Horseshoe Meadow crew fells a burned tree in the Elk Fork Campground for safety mitigation.

A member of the Horseshoe Meadow crew fells a burned tree behind the corrals in the Elk Fork Campground for safety mitigation.

A firefighter from the Devil's Canyon Veteran crew works on a Pulaski tool after finishing a shift.

A member of the Horseshoe Meadow crew fells a burned tree behind the corrals in the Elk Fork Campground for safety mitigation.

A Horseshoe Meadow crew works on felling and moving burned trees in the Elk Fork Campground as part of safety mitigation.

A Devil's Canyon firefighter refurbishes a chainsaw cover.

A member of the Horseshoe Meadow crew fells a burned tree behind the corrals in the Elk Fork Campground for safety mitigation.

A member of the Horseshoe Meadow crew fells a burned tree in the Elk Fork Campground for safety mitigation.

Two Devil's Canyon firefighters work on their chainsaw motors at the end of their shift.

The Clearwater Fire Incident Command Post, or ICP, is located in the day use area of the Buffalo Bill State Park North Fork Campground. The campground itself is open to the public, while the day use area is restricted to fire personnel only. At ICP, fire managers and crews set up work trailers, meeting spaces, temporary food preparation and shower facilities, and sleeping areas.

Members of the Horseshoe Meadow fire crew hike in to improve fireline from the UXU Ranch to the June Fire (2017) fire scar.

Fire Information Signs

Printed information, posted in key locations, is an important tool to inform residents and travelers about a nearby wildfire. Public information officers post new information at locations each day, in a process they call “running the trapline.” A business or organization gives its permission for fire information staff to place a display board at its location.