Drier than 2012?

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Drier than 2012?

Seasonal fire crews will be here soon
As the WEBER fire raged along the rim, a thousand points of light werevisible from smoldering embers along Weber Canyon last June.

Drier than 2012?

As the WEBER fire raged along the rim, a thousand points of light werevisible from smoldering embers along Weber Canyon last June.
No fire ban in place yet,

but burners should be cautious

Fire and law enforcement officials in Montezuma County are urging residents to tread carefully when burning brush or other materials on their property, due to lingering dry weather.

There is no open fire ban in effect at this time. Cortez Fire Protection District Chief Jeff Vandevoorde said such a ban is at the discretion of the county commissioners, who receive regular input from the sheriff's office and fire chiefs.

Sheriff Dennis Spruell met with the chiefs of Cortez, Mancos, Dolores, Lewis-Arriola and Pleasant View districts in March, and Vandevoorde said Spruell agreed to leave the call up to them, as the fire experts.

'Conditions aren't good,' Vandevoorde said, referring to the dearth of March precipitation. 'The wind is picking up most days. If you burn, it's better in the early morning. Make sure you have a water source nearby. And call dispatch beforehand so they don't send (firefighters) out for no reason when someone sees smoke. Give them notice.'

In the week from March 27 to April 3, of the 233 controlled burns called in, fire personnel responded to five that spiraled out of the landowner's control. Approximately 800 burns have been reported since January, said dispatch supervisor Lori Johnson.

'The end of March and through April is the height of burn season,' Johnson said. 'People like to get their spring clean-up done early to beat the burn ban ordinance.'

To call in a controlled burn, call the Cortez Police Department at 565-8441 and ask for dispatch - the line is staffed around the clock. Johnson said residents who feel their neighbor's burning activities are threatening their own property are justified in reporting it.

Deputy Emergency Manager Paul Hollar wants residents to be mindful of hot ash left smoldering even after flames have been put out.

'If those embers are still there and a windstorm picks up, you can get into trouble,' he said.

Hollar added that landowners should know their limits and not attempt to extinguish an out-of-control burn.

'Don't hesitate to call,' he said, noting that the three burns gone awry last Saturday only charred several acres beyond their intended boundaries because firefighters responded quickly.

While all of Colorado is under drought conditions, according to April 2 data from the U.S. Drought Monitor, Southwest Colorado is faring the best of any region in the state, at 'moderate drought.' Much of the Front Range and Eastern Plains are currently classified as 'extreme' or 'exceptional' drought.

The Montezuma County commissioners instated a fire ban last year between June 9 and July 30. It was suspended after late July monsoon rains brought some level of moisture to the area after a bone-dry summer.

Private landowners are not alone in controlled burning activities. The U.S. Forest Service and Bureau of Land Management frequently conduct prescribed burns to thin out overgrown wooded areas. The San Juan National Forest's Pagosa Ranger District, for example, torched 90 acres south of Chimney Rock National Monument on Wednesday. Dolores District Ranger Derek Padilla said no prescribed burns are planned on USFS land in Montezuma County at this time, but rangers have been clearing brush and doing some pile burning.



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