| New 
        fires over the weekend in one in the wilderness in the Big Sandy area 
        and one in the Greys River in Roosevelt Meadows. Iron 
        Creek Fire - 35 acres, Big Sandy areaBelieved 
        to be a lightning holdover, a new fire started south of Fish Creek Park 
        in the Big Sandy area on Sunday afternoon. Contrary to the name, it is 
        not in Iron Creek. It is south of Dad's & Marms Lake and the Fish 
        Creek Park area. It is approximately 3 miles north of Big Sandy Lodge 
        and 5 miles from the Summer homes. Currently it is burning within the 
        wilderness area and is being managed for
 "wildland fire use for resource benefit", according to Jay Anderson, 
        Public Affairs Specialist for the Bridger-Teton National Forest. It will 
        be monitored closedly in the event a suppression strategy is necessary. 
        Firefighters are monitoring the fire boundary and working to keep the 
        fire north of its present location.
 This fire is burning within the wilderness in a very rocky 
        area and reached approximately 35 acres in size today. Since it is not 
        possible to dig a fireline in this rocky area, the fire is being managed 
        with modified suppression strategy. This involves designating an area 
        where the fire will be allowed to burn to meet management objectives and 
        confining it within an area. "Basically we're going to herd the fire 
        where we want it with a containment strategy since we can't put a fireline 
        in this rocky area" said Cindy Stein of the Pinedale Ranger District.
 Eight smokejumpers and a helicopter were on the fire today 
        in suppression efforts. The fire is burning within about 1/8 mile of the 
        Fremont Trail, approximately 2.5-3 miles north of the Big Sandy trailhead. 
        The trail is currently open and signs are posted at the trailhead warning 
        hikers of the fire and any advisories. If the fire worsens, the trail 
        may be closed. This will be evaluated on a daily basis. Visitors wanting 
        to go into this area can call the Pinedale Ranger District to get the 
        current status of the trail and fire.
 The Forest Service thanks the public for reporting this 
        fire quickly. "We got tons of calls about this fire" said Cindy 
        Stein. Quick notification is a big help for firefighters to get resources 
        to wildfires quickly before the fire gets very big.
 Roosevelt 
        Fire - 25 acres, Roosevelt MeadowsThe 
        Roosevelt fire is located approximately one mile west of Roosevelt Meadows 
        in the Greys River District. This fire has been showing extreme fire behavior 
        and was at 25 acres earlier today. A 21-person Interagency hand crew, 
        8 smoke jumpers, a Type II (medium duty) helicopter and 4 air tankers 
        were on this fire today. Three additional 20-person hand crews were ordered 
        to relieve the Interagency firefighters presently working this fire.
 Boulder 
        Fire - 100% ContainedFire 
        crews are making regular patrols of the Boulder Fire to make sure it isn't 
        flaring up. It continues to burn in some small patches of aspens, but 
        is being watched carefully. All closures and restrictions were lifted 
        from this area.
 The Boulder Fire was located on Bridger-Teton National Forest 
        and private land between Boulder and Burnt Lakes, approximately 8 air 
        miles east of Pinedale and 7 air miles northeast of Boulder, Wyoming. 
        The fire burned on the north side of Boulder Lake on a south-facing slope, 
        almost exclusively in grass and sagebrush with only small pockets of aspen 
        trees burned. Boulder Lake Summer Homes, Skinner Brothers Wilderness Camp 
        on Burnt Lake, and Boulder Lake BLM Campground were threatened within 
        a mile of the blaze, but the fire did not reach them. This fire is suspected 
        to have been human-caused, but the exact cause has not been officially 
        determined.
 Other 
        FiresThe Virginia Peak Fire is burning near Virginia Peak in the Greys 
        River drainage. This fire was contained at 2 acres.
 The 
        Bear Cub Fire is in the Teton Wilderness approximately 6 miles 
        north of Brooks Lake. This fire is presently being managed as a Wildland 
        Fire Use for Resource Benefit and will be closely monitored in the event 
        suppression becomes necessary. The 
        Falcon Fire moved west of Falcon Creek over the weekend and is 
        now estimated at 2,700 acres. It is being managed in cooperation with 
        Yellowstone National Park. There is concern for the Hawk's Rest Patrol 
        Cabin located near Bridger Lake on the northern boundary of the Teton 
        Wilderness. The 
        Green Knoll Fire near Wilson is 100% Contained and Controlled, 
        but is still putting up some smoke as it burns vegetation within the fire 
        perimeter. Crews are closely monitoring this fire which probably won't 
        be completely out until the snow flies. 
  Apparently 
        there is still some confusion about what is and isn't allowed under the 
        current fire restrictions and the Forest Service is still finding abandoned 
        campfires in dispersed areas as well as in campgrounds. The open fire 
        restriction applies to all of Sublette County, including private lands. 
        Ranchers and landowners: burning trash in open barrels is not permitted, 
        even on your own land. If you want to have a Bar-B-Q, you need to be using 
        either a fully enclosed grill or be in a campground using a provided pit 
        or metal fire grill. A developed recreation area means a campground managed 
        by the Forest Service, BLM or some agency. An open area at the end of 
        a two-track road by a lake or stream with a campfire ring is not a developed 
        camping spot! If you aren't sure what is permitted, call the Forest Service 
        or Sheriff's Office and ask. Anyone found responsible for causing a wildfire 
        may be held responsible for the firefighting costs, so a carelessly tossed 
        cigarette or morning warming fire could end up being very expensive.
 | Earlier 
        Updates:
 Wednesday, 
        August 22 update
 Tuesday, 
        August 21, noon update
 Monday, August 
        20 7pm update
 Monday, August 
        20 10am update
 Sunday, August 
        19 update
 Wednesday, August 
        8 update
 Wednesday, August 
        1 update
 Sunday, 
        July 29 update
 Friday, 
        July 27 update
 Wednesday, 
        July 25 update
 Tuesday, 
        July 24 update
 Monday, 
        July 16 update
 Monday, July 9 update
 Sunday, July 8 update
 Saturday, July 7 update
 Friday July 6, 2001 
        9 pm update
 Friday, July 6, 2001 
        8 am update
 Thursday, July 5, 2001
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