Wildfire rages across 400 acres in North Carolina mountains; emergency declared
THIS STORY WAS UPDATED AT 7 P.M. TUESDAY, Nov. 7, 2023:
A rapidly spreading brush fire in the North Carolina mountains is estimated to cover more than 430 acres, officials said Tuesday.
The cause of the blaze is unknown. Henderson County declared a state of emergency late Sunday.
The fire was 15% contained by Tuesday, according to the N.C. Forest Service.
“The fire continues to back, creep, and smolder within the fire imprint, indicating low intensity fire activity,” Forest Service officials said on Facebook.
Last weekend, the fire engulfed two homes and led to evacuations, while a much larger but more remote wildfire prompted a Code Red air quality alert, Forest Service officials said.
No injuries or fatalities have been reported in the Poplar Drive wildfire in Henderson County. The affected area is about 10 miles east of Interstate 26, around a half-hour’s drive from Asheville.
On Saturday, the N.C. Division of Air Quality upped an air quality warning from Code Orange to Code Red for Cherokee and Henderson counties as the fires raged on. Clay and Macon counties later joined the Code Red list.
Code Red means the air is unhealthy for everyone.
“Older adults, children, active people, and those with lung or heart disease may experience more serious health effects,” according to the Code Red warning. “Everyone may experience health effects. Limit prolonged or heavy exertion outdoors.”
Evacuations in NC wildfire
Evacuations were underway Sunday, as another 34 structures remained threatened from the Poplar Drive brush fire in Henderson County, according to an N.C. Forest Service bulletin at 11 a.m. Sunday.
The Forest Service issued this warning on Facebook:
“With dry conditions and low relative humidity expected to continue over the next several days, the N.C. Forest Service is strongly urging the public to postpone any and all outdoor burning.”
The fire started in the East Poplar Road and Kyles Creek Road areas of Henderson County, south of Asheville, Saturday afternoon.
Henderson County government officials issued this bulletin on Facebook:
“The public is being encouraged to avoid the areas of Kyles Creek Road, East Poplar Drive, Green Mountain Road, Rhodes Road and any neighborhoods that connect off those roads to allow fire crews to operate safely.”
Collett Ridge Fire
Meanwhile, parched conditions spread a nearly two-week-old wildfire in Cherokee County, rangers said Saturday.
The Collett Ridge Fire, 4 miles south of the town of Andrews, grew to 2,919 acres on Tuesday, according to an update by the U.S. Forest Service.
About 1,700 people live in Andrews, located in a valley in the foothills of the Great Smoky Mountains. The Cherokee County town is about 90 miles southwest of Asheville and 210 miles west of Charlotte.
No injuries have been reported in the fires. No one has been evacuated due to the Collett Ridge fire, officials said Sunday.
As huge plumes of smoke from the Collett Ridge fire settled in valleys, “active” children and adults, and people with asthma and other respiratory conditions, should limit outdoor exercise, rangers urged Saturday.
“Strong inversions overnight are expected, causing the smoke to settle in the valleys,” according to the Forest Service update on Facebook.
Firefighters continued controlled-burning operations Saturday afternoon near Junaluska Road. That created more smoke, and visitors were urged to stay away, rangers said.
On Sunday, fire officials said crews were staffing the control effort 24/7.
“Drought conditions continued, and fire activity increased throughout the fire area, resulting in additional growth on all sides of the fire,” according to the Sunday morning bulletin. “The fire is mainly burning in remote, back country areas.”
About 95 firefighters are helping battle the fire, first spotted on Oct. 23.
The fire crossed the 25-mile Rim Trail to the south and moved into an area where the U.S. Forest Service conducted a prescribed burn in March.
That slowed the spread of the fire and its intensity, “with the primary fuel being the recent leaf fall,” according to the Forest Service statement on Saturday.
Outdoor burning ban
Due to parched conditions, an outdoor burning ban remained Tuesday for 14 Western N.C. counties, including Gaston and Cleveland counties closest to Charlotte.
Just a trace amount of rain is forecast in coming days, according to the 7 p.m. Tuesday forecast by the National Weather Service.
Some areas of the mountains, including Asheville, have a 60% chance of showers finally rolling in on Friday.
The chance of showers in Charlotte on Friday stands at a slim 30%, increasing to 40% late Friday and early Saturday.
This story was originally published November 4, 2023 at 2:17 PM.