Crews Work to Keep Wildfire from Air Force Academy

Waldo Canyon fire grows overnight to eight square miles.
Flames erupt on a ridge above the Cedar Heights neighborhood in Colorado Springs, Colo. Sunday, June 24, 2012. A wildfire near Colorado Springs erupted and grew out of control to more than 3 square miles early Sunday, prompting the evacuation of residents and an unknown number of tourists. (AP Photo/The Denver Post, Helen H. Richardson)
Published Tuesday, June 26, 2012

DENVER (AP) — Firefighters battled to keep a wildfire from burning toward the Air Force Academy and residential areas north of Colorado Springs on Tuesday.

The Waldo Canyon fire was 10 to 15 miles from the academy campus Monday, but officials weren't sure if it had moved closer.

At the High Park fire in northern Colorado, authorities increased the number of homes destroyed to 257, saying they found nine homes that hadn't been counted earlier. They said no additional homes had burned in the past two days.

The fire was one of at least a half-dozen burning across the state amid dangerously dry conditions and 100-degree temperatures.

The Waldo Canyon fire west of Colorado Springs grew about 1 square mile overnight to 8 square miles. Authorities said a shed was destroyed but no homes have been damaged.

About 5,000 people remained evacuated.

The fire, which started Saturday, was 5 percent contained. The cause was under investigation.

Two specially equipped Air Force C-130 planes helped fight the fire Monday. A third is expected Tuesday.

Some hiking trails leading west from the academy campus have been closed, but the new class of cadets is still scheduled to report on Thursday, Tech Sgt. Raymond Hoy said.

"We are open for business," he said.

Sightings of deer and bear on campus have increased since Monday, Hoy said, probably because the animals are fleeing the fire.

School health officials are monitoring air quality and commanders are discussing what precautions they might take if the fire moves closer.

The High Park fire 15 miles west of Fort Collins grew to about 136 square miles and was 55 percent contained. The fire killed one person. The 257 homes destroyed is a state record.

Lightning started the fire on June 9.

Incident commander Beth Lund said she was optimistic about holding and extending fire lines despite hot, dry weather.

Temperatures were expected to hit or exceed 100 degrees in Denver, Burlington, Pueblo and Grand Junction on Tuesday, with possible highs of 106 degrees on the eastern plains, the National Weather Service said.

On Monday, Denver set a record with 105 degrees. The previous record for June 25 was 100 degrees in 1991.

The Last Chance fire on Colorado's eastern plains grew from a few acres to 60 square miles in less than a day and burned at least two homes. It wasn't immediately clear if any were destroyed.

The fire started Monday and triggered evacuations in the towns of Last Chance and Woodward, about 60 miles east of Denver.

Some of the other fires burning in Colorado on Tuesday:

— The Little Sand fire had burned 34 square miles 13 miles northwest of Pagosa Springs. It was 29 percent contained.

— The Weber fire six miles south of Mancos had burned 13 square miles and was 10 percent contained.

— The Treasure fire five miles northeast of Leadville had burned about one-half square mile and was also 10 percent contained.

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Crews Work to Keep Wildfire from Air Force Academy

Waldo Canyon fire grows overnight to eight square miles.
Flames erupt on a ridge above the Cedar Heights neighborhood in Colorado Springs, Colo. Sunday, June 24, 2012. A wildfire near Colorado Springs erupted and grew out of control to more than 3 square miles early Sunday, prompting the evacuation of residents and an unknown number of tourists. (AP Photo/The Denver Post, Helen H. Richardson)


A helicopter and another aircraft battle the Waldo Canyon Fire near Colorado Springs, Colo., on Monday, June 25, 2012. The fire, one of at least a half-dozen wildfires in Colorado as of Monday, has blackened 5.3 square miles and displaced about 6,000 people since it started Saturday. (AP Photo/Bryan Oller)


In this Monday June, 25,2012 photo Jeff Corum, left, and his son, Jeff Corum Jr., survey the elder Corum's destroyed home on Kings Canyon Road on June 25, 2012, as residents within the fire zone are allowed to return home by authorities. It was the first time Corum returned to his home after it was destroyed in the High Park Wildfire that has scorched more than 103 square miles and destroyed at least 248 homes about 15 miles northwest of Fort Collins. A fire near Rocky Mountain National Park destroyed 22 homes over the weekend. Corum did not have insurance for the hunting cabin where he lived year round. He plans to live in a tent on the property. Among the items found in the ruins: a collection of antique coin banks, the younger Corum's first shot gun, and a commemorative champagne glass from the younger Corum's 2007 wedding. (AP Photo/ P. Solomon Banda)