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Falls Fire

Unit Information

431 Patterson Bridge Rd 
John Day, 
Oregon 
97845 
431 Patterson Bridge Rd 
John Day, 
Oregon 
97845 

Incident Contacts

Falls and Telephone Fires Update for Aug 6, 2024 08-06-2024

Falls Fire, Telephone Fire
Publication Type: News - 08/06/2024 - 09:47

Falls and Telephone Fires Update for Aug 6, 2024

 

Telephone Fire Quick Facts:

Size: 53,110              Start Date: July 22, 2024                         Location: 12 miles NE of Burns, OR

Containment: 31%.  Total Personnel: 484 personnel          Cause: Lightning/Natural

Resources Assigned: 16 hand crews, 10 engines, 6 bulldozers, 8 water tenders, 5 skidders

 

Falls Fire Quick Facts: 

Size: 147,161               Start Date: July 10, 2024                    Location: 13 Miles NW of Burns, OR

Containment: 75%     Total Personnel: 554               Cause: Human-caused, under investigation

Structures Triaged: Residences: 386; Commercial: 119 Outbuildings: 760

Resources Assigned: 27 hand crews, 46 engines, 16 bulldozers, 21 water tenders, 6 masticators, 8 skidders

 

Sand Mountain Fire Quick Facts:

Size: 5,958                Start Date: July 25, 2024                        Location: 17 miles SW of Seneca, OR

Containment: 0%   Total Personnel: Staffed by Falls Fire personnel   Cause: Lightning/Natural

 

Other Fires Quick Facts:

Whiskey Mountain: 4,345 acres; Cow Creek: 86 acres; Parasol: 485 acres; Poison: 1,059 acres; Ritter: 461

Total Personnel: Staffed by Falls Fire personnel.     

 

Aerial resources assigned: 2 Type 1 helicopters and One Type 1 Uncrewed Aircraft System (UAS) assigned and available to all fires in the area.

 

Community Meetings Scheduled: 

Tuesday, August 6 at 7 pm, at the Harney County Chamber of Commerce, 484 N. Broadway, in Burns 

Leaders of the Alaska Incident Management Team will be in Burns for a community meeting to provide an update on the Telephone Fire, Falls Fire, and several other fires we are working to suppress in the area. The meeting will also be shared on the Malheur National Forest Facebook page, as well as the Falls and Telephone Fires Facebook page. 

Priorities for Monday, August 5: 

  1. Initial Attack (IA): The potential for new fire starts in the area remains significant, and firefighters remain vigilant and focused on IA, ready to respond to any new threats
  2. Southwest side of the Telephone Fire
  3. Northeast side of the Falls/Sand Fire
  4. East side of the Telephone Fire

 

Fire Summaries:

Conditions are prime for high fire activity today, and the fires continue to test our crews’ fortitude and resilience, but lines are holding. As of now, we have 300,000 acres of fire in our fire area, and 200,000 acres of line.

 

Telephone Fire: 

The Telephone Fire was active Monday and will likely be active today as well. Lots of resources worked around the recent King Mountain slopover, including 3 hotshot crews (the Navajo, Wyoming, and Grand Hotshots) and aerial resources dropping retardant. Crews are working to find opportunities along the road system to wrap fire back into the 2820 road. Work will continue on this area today, including filling in small gaps in existing handline, and increasing dozer line. The Rattlesnake area is looking good; crews will continue working on improving the anchor to it, and patrolling. Monday, crews gained depth mopping up into containment line along the east side of the Telephone Fire, and improved dozer line. In the southeast portion of the Telephone Fire, there is a pocket of unburned fuel around East Cow Creek with some fire moving around inside it, but this has not caused any issues to containment in the area. Crews will work today towards finalizing an arm on the northeast side of Poujade Field, progressing deeper into the containment line, and Oregon National Guard crews continue increasing depth of containment on the southeast side.

 

Falls/Sand Fires

The Falls Fire also had lots of activity yesterday. In the Myrtle Creek area, crews had success conducting small-scale ignition operations along the 3150 road out to the 31 road, addressing some difficult areas with dead trees from bug kill. In this area, two fingers of fire pushed towards the road, and there were lots of spots across line, but all were caught. Crews will continue working hard in this area today. As fire weather potentially intensifies today, crews who have been working along the southern and southwestern portions of the Falls Fire will be assigned to Initial Attack if needed; they will otherwise continue to hold and secure line and increase mop up depth to the south and southwest sides, and extend mop up depth inside containment lines in the Whiskey Mountain area. In the Gilbert Ridge area, and also northwest of the Sand fire, crews will continue to hold and reinforce line, and mop up further into containment lines. The east/northeast side continues to look good; yesterday crews removed 9.5 miles of 1.5-inch diameter hose and related equipment there yesterday. 

 

Poison Fire: An interior island of vegetation on Poison Creek filled in with fire, adding acres but no exterior growth. Crews are continuing to clean up pockets of fuel to more deeply secure the control line. 

 

Weather: Terrain driven winds in the morning will give way to west southwest winds in the afternoon, turning west/northwesterly later in the day, with occasional gusts to 30 mph possible at exposed locations. Relative humidity will be in the low teens. Near Critical Fire Weather conditions are expected today.

 

Evacuations: For the most accurate evacuation information, please visit the Harney County Sheriff’s evacuation map here: https://bit.ly/FallsFireEvac, or the Grant County Emergency Management Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100068819321423. 

 

Closures: A closure is in effect for the two portions of the Malheur National Forest that run west of 395B, north of Mt. Vernon and south of Long Creek, in the Fox Valley area, including all roads, trails, and camping locations within the fire closure area. A detailed map of the closure if included and available on the Malheur National Forest website (https://www.fs.usda.gov/malheur/) and offices.

 

Investigation: U.S. Forest Service fire investigators are seeking the public’s assistance with any tips or information pertinent to the start of the Falls Fire on the Malheur National Forest. Please submit any information that could assist fire investigation efforts to SM.FS.R6TipHotLine@usda.gov.  

 

Temporary Flight Restriction (TFR): TFRs in the area have been changing; pilots should check the latest information on the Federal Aviation Administration TFR website prior to flying: https://tfr.faa.gov/tfr_map_ims/html/index.html

 

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/p/Falls-Fire-2024-61562126623985/

Falls Fire InciWeb:  https://inciweb.wildfire.gov/incident-information/ormaf-falls-fire

Telephone Fire InciWeb: https://inciweb.wildfire.gov/incident-information/ormaf-telephone-fire

Fire Information Line: 541-208-4370, staffed 8 a.m. to 8 p.m.

Email: 2024.Falls@firenet.gov

Harney County non-emergency evacuation questions: 541-589-5579

Air quality questions: 541-573-2271. Air quality information, searchable by zip code: https://fire.airnow.gov/

Smoke Outlooks: https://outlooks.airfire.org/outlook