Quiet

15 07 2026

That little rain I posted about yesterday over Spring Creek Basin? Apparently quite a lot more fell over the Ferris Fire, and that has helped firefighters reach 43 percent containment on the 64,868-acre fire. Some zones still have active evacuation orders – Zone 16 on the Dolores-San Miguel County line west of Spring Creek Basin; Zone 2 along Ryman Creek southeast of the basin; Zone 10, south along the Dolores River. Up-Disappointment-Valley residents remain at “set” status, as is Glade Ranch (on the east side of the fire, which had been among the first zones evacuated) and Zone 14a and Zone 14b on the very west/northwest side of the fire.

The entire forecast for the foreseeable future contains the potential for thunderstorms. Yay, rain … not so much any accompanying lightning? I got word yesterday afternoon that smoke had been reported up-valley by a firefighting helicopter pilot. Two engines were sent, and though I didn’t hear an outcome report yet, I hope that was squashed before it really got going. It would have been caused by a lightning strike from Monday’s passing storm, and while *I* looked in that area specifically for smoke that evening, I never saw anything. That’s just another lesson in how fires can smolder before they take hold.

The pilot killed fighting the Gold Mountain Fire near Ridgway and Ouray has been identified as Nicholas Dale from British Columbia, Canada. Please hold his family in your prayers. Mentioned in this article and read about from other sources, apparently hundreds of people lined the route as he was carried from Gunnison to Grand Junction on Tuesday.

That’s just some heavy news, and I don’t really have it in me to do much of a post for today.

From my perch Monday evening on the south wall of Spring Creek canyon, looking back (southish) at the mustangs I originally walked out to see. The basin entrance is just below that little hill/butte at mid-back left. Some stormy promise in the background … not much smoke visible … it looked much the same yesterday evening.

Be safe out there. Continue to think RAIN. Include the firefighters – fallen and still fighting – in your prayers.





Some relief

14 07 2026

This pic, taken Sunday from between the main/original water catchment and Filly Peak in Spring Creek Basin, is looking southeast toward the Glade and Benchmark Lookout. A few days before, I’d seen the red swaths of retardant across the trees while looking at smoke up there, but I didn’t manage to get a decent pic that showed it. While fire continues to smoke in that area (that’s the Ferris Fire’s northeastern edge), clearly firefighters and aircraft pilots have been hard at work. So hugely grateful! Rick and Linda Freimuth, who staff the tower during the fire season (!!!) hope get the green light to return this week. The mustangs and I (you know they would if they could) will be cheering their return.

Now, some taken yesterday (Monday):

Storm brewing to the east. Spring Creek Basin’s western rimrocks and Filly Peak (lower left) are in sunshine, while Temple Butte, McKenna Peak, Brumley Point and the basin’s eastern ridges are shadowed by rain! Woo-the-heck-hoo!

Looking back to the west from the same spot as above. More rain! What looks like white smoke on the horizon at left IS smoke from the Ferris Fire … and I hope it got a good dose of the wet stuff. It wasn’t a high-rain-chance day, but toss the forecast and let ‘er rain!

Methinks the weather wizards were outsmarted by Ma Nature herself. 😉 RAIN, BABY, RAIN! This is from Chrome’s Point in western Spring Creek Basin, looking eastish at a curtain of rain that DID, as I was taking pix, make its way west. Unfortunately, I didn’t get tooooo wet. Ha – I would not have minded!

Ants congregating at the entrance to their mound. Apparently, “Ants congregate at their mound entrances after rain primarily to survive flooding. When underground tunnels fill with water, the colony is forced to evacuate. They move the queen, larvae, and food upward to escape the saturation, using the surface or mound entrance as a temporary, elevated sanctuary.” Interestingly, these ants and others I saw doing the same thing in the same relative area happened to be on some of the highest ground in the basin, near the western boundary. I guess that when you’re an ant, everything is at the elevation of ground level (ha ha!).

From the south wall of Spring Creek canyon looking eastish after the rain (it didn’t last very long, unfortunately).

Hope you don’t mind this view! It’s pretty spectacular. No, that’s not a road down there in the canyon; that’s Spring Creek arroyo, and just beyond (lower left), it leaves Spring Creek Basin to cross lower-ish Disappointment Valley on its way to join Disappointment Creek (neither of which are carrying water at the moment).

See the pinto pony? This is from the same point as the above two pix, looking generally northwestish across lower Disappointment Valley toward Utah’s La Sal Mountains. There’s a fence across this lower end of the canyon to keep the mustangs within Spring Creek Basin, and there’s a water gap (hanging PVC pipes to move when water DOES flow) across the Spring Creek arroyo. There are a couple of manmade structures down there, one behind McKenna and one kind of in front of him.

As it turned out, though he and his pal and a band were in the vicinity – and the reason I walked out – it was something else entirely that actually took me all the way to the canyon rim. … And that will wait for another post because I got some pix that knocked even my socks off.

To end this post, news that I never want to post because I want it to never have happened, some really tragic news from the Gold Mountain Fire near Ouray and Ridgway: A pilot was killed Sunday when his aircraft, used to aid firefighting efforts on that fire, crashed into Silver Jack Reservoir, in southwestern Gunnison County, on the northeast side of the fire. It’s the worst of all news to lose another firefighter. 😦





Not the only ones

13 07 2026

The temp hit 100F Saturday.

The temp hit at least 98F Sunday before a few-minute rain came through and dropped the temp to 77F in early afternoon! The cooldown was the best (though it did return to 90s); the rain dampened the ground … and as soon as it quit, the ground was dry. That fast.

I learned yesterday from a firefighting source that the Ferris Fire now is the No. 1 priority wildfire in the United States. That’s not based on size (it’s 64,464 acres, 23 percent containment, and there are 1,031 personnel fighting this fire (numbers as of Sunday evening)); it’s based on things like protecting grazing and farmland, homes/private properties, infrastructure (the fire is burning on both sides of the Tri-State Generation and Transmission Association powerline), etc.

I didn’t take many pix of the Ferris Fire from Disappointment Valley on Friday. I did take some from Ridgway of the Gold Mountain Fire, burning about 35,622 acres (with 5 percent containment and 1,006 people working on it).

Taken from Ridgway State Park north of Ridgway looking southeastish. The fire is burning on the east side of U.S. Highway 550 between Ouray and Ridgway.

Just to say that there are multiple fires burning in the state, affecting many, many people. Some directly (the loss of homes and businesses is absolutely devastating), some indirectly, and I bet everyone in the state knows someone who is affected, whether by fire or smoke or both. Keep them all in your thoughts.

Buckeye and his band made an appearance Friday. They’d disappeared into the folds and ridges and drainages of the far eastern and southeastern regions of Spring Creek Basin, getting water from seeps in those arroyos and grazing places with little to no competition, and I’d been missing them.

A big shout-out to members of my parents’ church: Mooreville Global Methodist Church in Central Texas. My parents have asked them to keep our area and our people and our critters and, especially, our firefighters in their prayers. I’m not a religious person, per se, but I believe in angels, and I believe in the power of prayer. I cried when my mom and dad told me that. 🙂 Thank you, thank you, thank you, all!





Luminous

12 07 2026

Lovely Mariah in the hazy sunset smokelight. She was grazing in a shallow little arroyo below me … two band members to my right, two more behind her up the other slope. As much as she normally keeps an eye on me, I was lucky to get this one, millisecond look before she returned nonchalantly to her grazing.

I’ve been relieved and jubilant to discover that even during this drought, under smoky conditions, there is actual grass for the mustangs in Spring Creek Basin. And for the most part – a couple of hardworking stallions notwithstanding – the horses are in exceptional condition. As always, I’m thankful for the little/big things … and hopeful for rain to come (without lightning!), which ought to green the place up if we get “enough.”

The morning was clear again; the smoke drifted in again around mid-morning. The temp took its time rising, and it was 97F when I left for an appointment toward late afternoon. The Ferris Fire is at 63,000-plus acres, and nearly 850 people are assigned to fight it. According to Watch Duty, it’s the second largest wildfire currently in Colorado, the largest being the 97,504-acre Aspen Acres Fire southwest of Pueblo that has burned an estimated 850 structures and at least 300 homes. Heartbreaking. To our west, the Babylon Fire in Utah is burning 104,252 acres in the Abajo Mountains, southwest of our familiar La Sal Mountains. Northeast of us, the Gold Mountain Fire burns almost 35,000 acres west of new-start Elk Fire (250 acres).

Rick Freimuth, continuing to work on the Ferris Fire while his and wife Linda’s post at Benchmark Lookout is being defended from the fire, said, “The overhead teams relay that [the community’s gratitude] as well during morning briefings.”

So keep holding those folks in your prayers, and if you can make a donation to firefighters or communities ravaged by wildfires, please do so.





Return to ‘normal’

11 07 2026

Well, as predicted, the relatively clear sky Thursday returned to smoky by mid-morning yesterday.

Coverage Reporter Traci Clark on Watch Duty noted that “While firefighters continued to improve containment lines along the east and southeastern sides of the Ferris Fire today [Friday], there was an increase in activity in the northwestern area down into Dolores Canyon. Crews responded by dropping retardant and improving dozer lines in the area. The fire has not crossed the westernmost bend of the Dolores River and currently remains within containment lines.”

The fire has consumed 63,271 acres and is 19 percent contained.

Today and tomorrow, the mercury is likely to hit and surpass 100 degrees in many places across Colorado’s Western Slope, and as previously noted, the humidity is nearly nonexistent. Next week, then, while we have decent rain chances … those chances come right alongside thunderstorm activity.

Above: Looking south to Seneca’s band … Filly Peak beyond the horses … Ferris Fire smoke filling the southern horizon beyond (thankfully) Disappointment Valley.

Top: Seneca, carrying on. The mustangs seem to be more bothered by the usual summer flies and gnats than anything else.

Bless the firefighters. Stay hydrated. Stay safe.





Signs of clearing

10 07 2026

Bad summer air quality is the new normal. Though you wouldn’t know it from the above pic of Flash, following his mares last night to water.

I love those clouds. I love that (relative) lack of smoke! Looking south.

The Ferris Fire has burned 62,915.6 acres as of Thursday night and is 19 percent contained. From Watch Duty’s 6:33 p.m. report by Regional Captain Adam Johnson:

“Crews worked to build containment today, especially in the lower Dolores River Canyon along Forest Roads 504 and 521, utilizing strategic firing operation along more than a mile of road.

“Fire behavior moderated throughout the fire area as winds laid down and humidity was higher in the morning after rain showers yesterday.

“Hot shot crews worked directly along the fire’s edge on the portion of the fire near Benchmark Lookout. That area has been relatively calm for several days. [I’ll second that; I saw just one tiny little smoke below Benchmark from Spring Creek Basin yesterday. I could see swaths of red retardant across the trees and land around it even from the basin.]

“The weather forecast for the coming days shows hotter and drier conditions with humidity as low as 6% and a potential increase in fire activity, per Ferris Fire Information on Facebook.”

There are nearly 660 people fighting the Ferris Fire currently. Gigantic and heartfelt gratitude to each and every one of them!

Gaia at sunset, walking away from water following her band.

OK, so we still have smoke in the air. … But that’s not a bad sunset, all things considered.

Colorado Gov. Jared Polis declared a disaster emergency in response to the Ferris Fire. Note that the photo captions in the linked article are wrong (at least as of my viewing); we’re actually in southwestern Colorado. Also, as a recovering journalist who worked in Colorado and was involved in the coverage of at least a few fires, I capitalize the f in fire when it’s a named fire: Ferris Fire, not Ferris fire. That’s a journalist-nerd note, but I see it in articles both ways, and this is to explain why I capitalize it.





Perspective

9 07 2026

After some reports from different sources of tiny bits of rain here and there (Tuesday day/night, maybe some drips Wednesday), the sky was much more our normal and beloved Colorado-blue than we’ve seen in a run of smoky days. Ferris Fire (60,104 acres as of Wednesday night) smoke at left; Babylon Fire (101,073 acres) smoke at right. Looking mostly south.

The fire must have gotten into some new, untouched fuels by evening because by 7 p.m. or later, it was really sending up a plume. That’s Filly Peak in the near background, and you can see a bit how perspective matters: Not only is the fire not directly behind it, it’s not *super* closely behind/south of Disappointment Valley’s south ridges. (I did still see a little line of smoke in the Ryman Creek area a bit later.) Mustang ponies in the middle ground, napping.

This and the above pic toward Filly Peak were taken from the same vantage point: Chrome’s Point in Spring Creek Basin’s far western region (not far from the rimrocked western boundary). This one is looking slightly leftish of Filly Peak and southeast/east. The smoke is fairly faint … a MUCH better sight than we’ve had the last many days.

Those are more clouds than smokedrift, though, of course, there’s still smoke there from Utah’s huge Babylon Fire, now more than 101,000 acres. … Mother Nature is trying to stir up the clouds into delivering rain.

See the pillars of sunset glow at left? I love it when the sun waves goodnight to us like that.

A couple of links to articles I’ve found interesting recently:

Tribute paid to Emily Barker, Nick Hutcherson and Sydney Watson, who died fighting the Snyder Fire. Held in Grand Junction, Colorado. Impossible to imagine the pain of their families and colleagues and friends.

“Monsoon rains are on the horizon,” say the weather wizards, err, experts. We can only hope they’re finally going to be proved right. Some super heat is on tap first.

How some ranchers are coping with the stress of protecting their cattle and grazing lands. This really made me think of the hard-working ranchers I know.





The little things

8 07 2026

Probably, it’s hard to tell what you’re looking at here: It’s ash on cobweb over an old critter hole.

This one is more recognizable: That’s a Gambel or scrub oak leaf (or if some other kind of oak, please let me know). Burned. From the Ferris Fire (I know this because 1) we don’t have scrub oak in Spring Creek Basin (maaaaaaybe in the most upper elevation reaches), and 2) there’s no fire in Spring Creek Basin).

I’m not sure how far south the fire is, as the eagle flies or the oak leaf flutters, from even the southwestern edge of Spring Creek Basin, and I found both of the above things in the sort of almost-northish region of the basin. Kinda wild.

Mariah was not super interested in modeling in the smoke. Can’t blame her.

All above pix taken Monday evening. As of Tuesday morning, the fire was at almost 57,000 acres and still 22% contained.

The little things ARE the big things for us who love them all. Continued prayers and gratitude to all firefighters working on this fire (and all others) in all capacities.





Synchronous dusting

7 07 2026

Maiku and Corazon, of course, weren’t thinking of the humor, but in these wildfire days, I’ll take a smile at any opportunity. (Pic from a couple of days ago; yesterday was basically a brown haze nearly all day.)

Fire news: The Ferris Fire is 51,622 acres as of Monday night, and containment has increased to 22 percent. Nearly 540 people are working on this fire, and I would lay a bet that all surrounding residents are unimaginably grateful for every single one of them. Isn’t that pretty fabulous? We may not know any one of them; we love each and every one of them for fighting for OUR lands, our homes, our wildlife, our lives. No caveats, just absolute and total gratitude.

I got lucky with timing on this one, which *was* taken yesterday evening from Chrome’s Point in the basin. It was around 6:30 p.m., and the chopper was heading north from the Ferris Fire, likely back to base in … Montrose? Grand Junction? I wanted to jump up and down and wave and flash high fives, but I probably looked like an ant.

Or possibly a humanoid alien. 🙂 The smoke was bad enough when I set out that I added a mask to my accoutrements. By the time of this pic (sunset-ish yesterday), I may not have needed it, but maybe safer than sorrier? And take a gander to the far northwest mountains (Utah’s La Sals). Is that virga?!? One (and probably a whole lot more than this (some)one) can only hope that even some of that was hitting the parched earth.





Smoke ‘n ash

6 07 2026

Temple is the “sparkle” on the Fourth of July. 🙂

Smoke? Yes, we still have it, sometimes worse than others. Ash? We’ve been getting that, too. On my hikes in Spring Creek Basin, I’ve been seeing these weird black things, and when I reach down to touch them or pick them up – almost thinking it’s a rock or some kind of leaf? – they disintegrate in my fingers. But I haven’t been ready to call those bits of ash – they’ve been maybe about the size of a fingertip? Not large, not tiny. But today, no mistaking it, though it’s much finer and mostly white/grey. Hard to get a pic that shows it.

This is ash on water. Not sure it shows well?

From Watch Duty’s report Sunday night:

“Containment on the Ferris Fire has increased to 21% at 47,780 acres.

“Firefighters continued suppression efforts along all areas of the fire Sunday including significant firing operations in a finger canyon along the western edge of the Dolores River Canyon west of Five Pines Canyon.

“Crews strategically applied fire to widen and improve dozer lines and remove fuel in front of the advancing fire and reduce the potential for even more acres of uncontrolled fire impacting private and public lands.”

Smoke from the western/southwestern side of the Ferris Fire is at far lower right on the southern horizon of Disappointment Valley, blowing north/northeastish across the southeastern horizon. You can see part of McKenna Peak and Temple Butte at far lower left. The smoke low and to the right, that starts to obscure the farthest lower hills/ridges in the background is from the fire’s northeastern push into Ryman Creek drainage (that area) south of upper Disappointment Valley.

The smoke was not fun this morning and into the afternoon (hello, the ash). Fortunately, it lifted in the lower-mid part of the valley by the time I took the above pic, probably around 7:30 or 8 p.m.

And we carry on.