Fire closes Avalanche Lake Trail
Jesse Davis | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 13 years, 3 months AGO
A fire of more than 25 acres burst to life in Avalanche Basin amid dry, windy conditions Saturday afternoon in Glacier National Park.
According to Brad Harris, a fire management duty officer with the park, the first smoke report came in at around 2:30 p.m. about half a mile from Avalanche Lake.
Rangers quickly evacuated people from both the lake area and the popular Avalanche Lake Trail and closed both areas. The trail will remain closed as needed.
“We believe that it’s a lightning holdover from about 10 days ago, because we did have a smoke report, I believe on Wednesday, and were unable to locate it,” Harris said Saturday. “And finally, with the windy and dry conditions today, it went to town.”
Wind gusts at nearby Logan Pass ranged from 42 to 68 miles per hour Saturday afternoon.
Smoke from the fire was visible from Going-to-the-Sun Road, Apgar and Lake McDonald.
Glacier Park spokeswoman Denise Germann said two helicopters — one from Flathead National Forest and one from the Montana Department of Natural Resources and Conservation — dropped water on the fire on Saturday.
Harris said park officials hope to staff the fire early Sunday morning.
“We are trying to order up resources and begin tomorrow,” he said. “We’ve got a couple of helicopters requested and we’re trying to round up our fire personnel throughout the park.”
ARTICLES BY JESSE DAVIS
Wild ride results in two charges
KALISPELL — A Polson man who allegedly crashed his car into several objects and nearly another vehicle before hitting a road sign has pleaded not guilty to a pair of charges.
Officer placed on leave
Faces new investigation
POLSON — A Polson police officer is on administrative leave and facing both an internal and criminal investigation after a weekend incident at Swanee’s Bar & Grill.
Lake County investigations in legislative spotlight
HELENA — Allegations of corruption and cover-ups within the Lake County Sheriff’s Office have caught the attention of Montana attorney general hopeful Jim Shockley, who is using his clout in the state Legislature to bring light to what is and isn’t being done to investigate.