CBS/AP/ June 25, 2012, 8:56 AM

Colorado burning under worst wildfires in a decade

Updated at 3:18 p.m. ET

(CBS/AP) MANITOU SPRINGS, Colo. - Colorado's brutal wildfire season has the tourism industry on edge as images of smoke-choked landmarks and flaming vacation cabins dominate the news.

Colorado is having its worst wildfire season in a decade, with more than a half dozen forest fires burning across the state's parched terrain. Some hotels and campgrounds are emptying ahead of the busy Fourth of July holiday. And some vacation hotspots far from the flames worry they'll be affected, too.

A blaze near Colorado Springs, at the base of Pikes Peak, grew to more than 6 square miles Sunday, prompting evacuation orders for 11,000 residents and an unknown number of tourists. Many were allowed to return by Monday, but smoke and haze at times obscured Pikes Peak, the most-summited high-elevation mountain in the nation and inspiration for the song "America The Beautiful."

The outlook is not encouraging with hot and windy weather expected to continue to fan the flames, Rick Sallinger of CBS Denver station KCNC-TV reported Monday on "CBS This Morning." Temperatures are expected to hit the high 90's for at least the next two days.

Meanwhile, the resort town of Estes Park near Rocky Mountain National Park was recovering a quick-moving blaze that destroyed 22 homes, many of them vacation cabins.

A few guests at the Blue Skies Inn at the base of Pikes Peak had already canceled when they saw plumes of smoke on TV Saturday. The remaining nine rooms had to be emptied after midnight Sunday, the bed-and-breakfast's first evacuation in 15 years.

"We just went room to room, knocked on doors and said, 'We need to boogie now,'" said manager Mike Dutcher. The inn was back open Monday when the evacuation was lifted, but Dutcher said his business is still in danger — from edgy tourists who may avoid Colorado because of the fires.

Fast-moving Colo. fire threatens tourist spots
New Colo. wildfire erupts, grows out of control
Utah wildfire evacuees allowed to return to homes

Dutcher remembers a brutal wildfire season a decade ago, when a former governor famously told news cameras "all of Colorado is on fire." The governor was referring to a blaze that was many miles from Pikes Peak, but Dutcher said the effect was immediate.

"The phones didn't ring for three days during the height of the season, and when they started ringing again, it was cancellations," Dutcher said. "It's something that needs to be handled carefully. Tourism is a big business in Colorado, and if you hyperventilate when CNN shows up, it hurts a lot of people."

Even while other large fires burn across the West, Colorado's blazes have demanded half the nation's firefighting fleet, according to Colorado Gov. John Hickenlooper.

In a signal of how serious the nation's fire threat has become, the U.S. Forest Service asked the Air Force to activate four C-130 cargo planes equipped to drop water or fire retardant. The Forest Service is allowed to request the planes only when all private tanker planes already are fighting fires or are unavailable for use.

The C-130s are expected to be ready by Tuesday but officials haven't said where they would be deployed. Two are from the Wyoming Air National Guard in Cheyenne, Wyo., and two from the Colorado Air Force Reserve at Peterson Air Force Base, Colo.

Also over the weekend, residents of a subdivision near the northern Colorado city of Fort Collins learned that 57 more homes in their neighborhood had been lost to the High Park Fire, which already had claimed 191 homes, authorities said.

The High Park Fire is the second-largest wildfire and among the most expensive in Colorado's history. It has scorched more than 130 square miles and was just 45 percent contained.

Elsewhere, firefighters were hoping lighter winds would assist make progress against wildfires in Alaska, Arizona, New Mexico and California.

  • An Alaska wildfire between Mount McKinley and town of Anderson grew to more than 30 square miles Monday. No homes were threatened.
  • Despite dry, hot conditions, firefighters battling a fire that consumed nearly 70 square miles west of Roswell, N.M., was 90 percent contained, with many residents allowed to return home. And across the state, two small fires north of Santa Fe Sunday evening prompted brief evacuations of a handful of homes. One of the blazes threatened the historic El Santuario de Chimayo, a 19th century church that receives almost 300,000 visitors per year, but the church appeared out of danger Monday.
  • A wildfire in Tonto National Forest near Young, Ariz., was 65 percent contained Monday as winds slowed to about 3 mph.
  • Evacuation orders remained in place in Sanpete County, Utah, where said they had 10 percent containment on a fire that's threatening about 300 homes in Sanpete County.

© 2012 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
11 Comments Add a Comment
linkicon reporticon emailicon
foo8259 says:
What have we done to our climate? Floods in Miami Florida and Atlanta Georgia, mudslides in California, but not enough rain in Texas for over two years?
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
pinkskin says:
As a resident of Colorado Springs, I can report that as of this time, with the exception of several small fires presumed to be intentionally set in the Woodland Park area, there is no evidence that any other fire in CO was set by humans, intentionally or otherwise. Historically hot temperatures, wind patterns, lack of moisture, terrain and as stated above beetle damaged trees are the factors that have contributed most significantly to this fire. Not environmentalists. Residents of the Cedar Heights area which is currently threatened have been working for quite some time with local fire officials to create evacuation strategies. The residents have been very cooperative in clearing brush and debris from their properties in an attempt to create a fireproof zone around their homes. Let's hope that we do not have to witness the "irony" as Mike_in_USA has suggested, and that no one loses their home, no matter who they are.
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
credibility2 says:
Environmentalists helped create this problem. All underbrush should be routinely removed or ignited in a controlled burn and any laws that allow for underbrush to remain needs to be repealed and abolished. There is too much dead underbrush throughout all forested areas that created the volatility of these areas.
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
bacardimex1 says:
I have predicted this fire outbreak for a number of years. There have been to many homes, hotel, businessm and resorts built in the mountains. They were never intended to be inhabited. The natural way to eliminate the Pine Beetle is fire. This has nothing to do with GOD it is a direct result of mans missuse of natural resources. This fire has not reached the high country yet, it will, it is only a matter of time and when it does it will not be put out it will burn everything it its path all the way to the Wyoming border. Sad but true the Mountains have been abused, and there is a price to be paid for that abuse. The most of the fires are by lightning strikes. If you know anything about the Bible God does not punish...nature has a natural flow and no one can go against it..
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
danstoner says:
"FLAMES forced thousands of Colorado residents from their homes over the weekend [...]" - why oh why is the first sentence of the first paragraph, AND the central fact/theme of this article, DEAD WRONG? It was not, in fact, the flames (fire) which forced everyone from their homes. It was flames in a few cases, but in the vast majority of the cases/homes/families, in my understanding, it was not the flames, but instead the state and local GOVERNMENTS, via local law enforcement officers, which was guilty of forcing people from their homes, whether they liked it or not, whether the fire actually imminently threatened them or not. Which MAY have been illegal, and was certainly immoral. Why is the basic assertion of the article wrong or false, thereby avoiding discussion of the most important point in this subject matter - that being the overreaching of the government into private decision-making process and the right to stay and take measures to protect one's home against the fires?
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
danstoner says:
"FLAMES forced thousands of Colorado residents from their homes over the weekend [...]" - why oh why is the first sentence of the first paragraph, AND the central fact/theme of this article, DEAD WRONG? It was not, in fact, the flames (fire) which forced everyone from their homes. It was flames in a few cases, but in the vast majority of the cases/homes/families, in my understanding, it was not the flames, but instead the state and local GOVERNMENTS, via local law enforcement officers, which was guilty of forcing people from their homes, whether they liked it or not, whether the fire actually imminently threatened them or not. Which MAY have been illegal, and was certainly immoral. Why is the basic assertion of the article wrong or false, thereby avoiding discussion of the most important point in this subject matter - that being the overreaching of the government into private decision-making process and the right to stay and take measures to protect one's home against the fires?
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
Mike_in_USA says:
So much property lost and damaged. Many lives changed for the worst. Maybe stopping all forest management by litigation was not such a good idea?
It would be ironic if the Colorado envronmentalists, living the 'Mother Earth' life lost their homes and many posessions.
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
lloydbest1 says:
Actually Louisville, the media (including FOX) claims nearly all of them are caused by lightning strikes and the few that aren't and are man caused are accidental. Haven't yet heard of one in the entire Rocky mountain region that was known the be arson.

In fact, I am enough surprised by this that I was going to mention this very unusual happenstance anyway. Your post has provided me with the perfect lead in.

That doesn't mean that some ididot won't make a liar out of me before the week (or even the day) is out.......
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
lantanalenox says:
God is punishing Colorado because of the presence there of the hate group Focus on the Family, and its diabolical leader, James Dobson.
reply
DC_Clark replies:
linkicon reporticon emailicon
Oh Boy !!
pinkskin replies:
linkicon reporticon emailicon
Just because someone is stating fact, that FotF is a recognized hate group, does not mean that they are full of hate themselves. As a resident of Colorado Springs, I can attest that there is at this time no evidence to suggest humans deliberately or not are responsible for any of the fires other than the smaller fires that have been set in Woodland Park over the past couple of weeks. BTW: James Dobson travels about in bulletproof vehicles. So much for trusting in the Lord!!
See all 11 Comments