|
FIRE! 2003 will go down
as a very historic fire year for Glacier Country. Fire season doesn't usually
start until late August or early September, so it was surprising to see fire
underway in mid-July. By mid-September there were 16 large fires in the region
covering more than 310,000 acres. Of that total acreage, 145,000 were within
Glacier National Park. Yet, Glacier National Park estimates that only 10
percent of the entire Park burned.
In comparison, Glacier National Park averages 14 fires each
summer and has averaged 5000 acres burned each year since 1988. Some fires are
small, remote fires that most visitors will never see flames or smoke from.
Other fires have grown quite large and can be very visible.
The fires of 2003 were clearly visible, both
locally and throughout western Montana. Lightening started the first fire in
the Flathead's North Fork Valley on July 18. That fire eventually ran across
the North Fork River into Glacier National Park. On July 23, the Robert Fire
started in the lower North Fork Valley and within hours jumped the North Fork
Road and the North Fork River into Glacier National Park, eventually
threatening the populated areas of West Glacier, Apgar and Park headquarters.
The Trapper Fire, burning just west of the Continental Divide within Glacier
National Park, threatened the historic Granite Park Chalet and advanced across
the Going-to-the-Sun Road. Smoke and fires forced the evacuations of West
Glacier, Apgar Village, and much of the Lake McDonald Valley. The fire season
ended with a wet cold front in early September.
The fires played an obvious role in the 43 percent
decline in park visitation for the month of August compared with August of
2002. |