| Current 
        Fire Information:Over the past 24 hours, the Cow Camp fire grew from 15 acres to approximately 
        315 acres by Sunday morning. This fire is burning south of Pinedale and 
        east of Boulder in the Pocket Creek drainage approximately 1.5 miles south 
        of Wolf Lake, just outside the Bridger Wilderness boundary. It has been 
        determined that this fire was caused by lightning.
 Local firefighting crews will be supplemented tomorrow 
        by two more 20-person crews who will be arriving from the Pacific Northwest. 
        Resources are limited for this fire because so many are currently working 
        on larger fires in other areas. An outfitter's camp and a cow camp are 
        in the vicinity of the fire area. The public is being asked to refrain 
        from using this area for safety purposes. There are no closures in effect 
        at this time.
 Forest Service firefighting efforts are aimed at protecting 
        the cow camp and outfitter camp which are located northwest of the fire 
        and keeping the fire north of Jim Creek. Emphasis is on containment of 
        the southwest and southern flanks of the fire.
 The Cow Camp fire was detected Saturday morning and 
        has been determined to have been caused by lightning. Currently the B-T 
        Regulars and a 20-person fire crew are assigned to the fire which is headed 
        by a Type 3 Team. There is a red flag warning in effect this afternoon 
        for wind gusts up to 35 mph which could hamper control efforts.
 The other 
        Pinedale, in ArizonaResidents of Pinedale, Arizona, finally began returning to their homes 
        east of a giant Arizona wildfire Saturday, after spending a week watching 
        from afar as the inferno threatened their neighborhoods and charred nearly 
        half a million acres. The massive Rodeo-Chediski still threatens to overrun 
        several communities, and other areas near Pinedale, Arizona are still 
        closed. On the 700-square-mile fire's western flank, a two-lane highway 
        served as an asphalt line in the sand where firefighters battled to keep 
        the flames from spreading to more communities. The massive fire reached 
        437,000 acres by early Saturday. Nearly 30,000 residents were forced out 
        of their homes by the fire as a precaution. More than 4,100 firefighters 
        are battling the blaze. Officials said 423 homes have been lost -- but 
        thousands have been saved. (more on CNN online 
        news)
 
 
         
          | CURRENT 
              FIRE RESTRICTIONS Bridger-Teton 
              National Forest:NO fire restrictions on Bridger-Teton National Forest administered 
              lands at this time.
 BLM:NO 
              fire restrictions on BLM administered lands at this time.
 State: 
              Restrictions went into effect on State lands on June 11th. No 
              open fires, barbecue grills or fireworks on any lands or facilities 
              administered by the Game and Fish Department.
 |      | Fires 
        at a GlanceOne fire, 
        the Cow Camp Fire, is currently burning in the Wind River Range of the 
        Pinedale Ranger District in the Bridger-Teton National Forest near the 
        wilderness. The fire is approximately 1.5 miles south of Wolf Lake just 
        outside the Bridger Wilderness boundary. Fire size is estimated at 315 
        acres as of 8 am Sunday morning. No trails, roads or structures affected 
        at this time. No closures are in effect. 
      Winds in 
        eastern Wyoming have caused fires there to burn across containment lines 
        and increase in size. Fires are currently burning on the Medicine Bow 
        National Forest and on BLM administered lands near Casper and Rawlins. 
        As of today, 6 other fires are burning in Wyoming, none of which are contained.
      The Cow 
        Camp fire is the only wild fire currently reported on the Bridger-Teton 
        National Forest.   National 
        Wild Fire Incident Map National 
        Wildland Fire Update   |