Ore. Residents Return Home After Fire
Camp Sherman residents were asked not to walk or drive in areas burned by the wildfire, and nonresidents were still banned.
``They need to be cautious,'' said Jeree Mills, fire spokeswoman. ``There's a lot of things that are dangerous that people don't see, like holes and snags and things.''
Residents were ordered out of their homes Friday for a second time when two fires merged into one and jumped containment lines. Residents had earlier been evacuated for a 10-day stretch.
But rain and cooler weather helped more than 2,350 firefighters get an upper hand Monday, said David Widmark, spokesman for the Northwest Interagency Coordination Center. The fires have burned 90,367 acres and are 50 percent contained, he said.
Cold fronts also helped firefighters in other areas of the Northwest and the Northern Rockies.
In Montana, fire managers said scattered rain and cooler temperatures arrived without the feared high winds.
Montana's 18 major fires or fire complexes have burned more than 650,000 acres this season. Fire information officer Ricardo Zuniga of the Northern Rockies Interagency Information Center cautioned that the fire season will not be over until much more significant rain or snow arrives.
``Nobody here is talking about an end to the fire season,'' he said.
In Washington state, nearly a half an inch of rain fell in some areas, slowing fire growth and allowing crews to strengthen lines. That also allowed managers to cancel an evacuation order for residents of about 75 homes nearest a 24,500-acre fire in north-central Washington's upper Methow Valley, said Greg Thayer, a firefighters' spokesman.
About 1,000 residents near a wildfire in the San Bernardino National Forest in Southern California were allowed to return to their homes Monday, but authorities said a possible increase in wind could revive the blaze.
Across the West, 41 large fires were active Monday and had blackened 542,000 acres, according to the National Interagency Fire Center. As of Monday, 2.9 million acres had burned, well below the 10-year average of 3.8 million for the same period. Last year, 6.4 million acres had burned by Sept. 8.