Image provided by: Clackamas Community College; Oregon City, OR
About The Clackamas print. (Oregon City, Oregon) 1989-2019 | View Entire Issue (March 14, 2018)
Gorge left scarred by summer fire ¿TORY AND PHOTOS BY JONATHAN SANCHEZ - THE CLACKAMAS PRINT M an y people have b een greeted w ith a “ closed” sign and a fen ce as th ey w alk towards M ultnom ah Falls since last spring, m any o f w hich looked forward to a day o f hiking. It has been nearly seven m onths since the Eagle Creek fire tore through the Columbia River Gorge. Firefighters were finally able to contain it too percent on Nov. 30,2017. The fire lasted nearly three m onths burning almost 50,000 acres according to InciWeb. A s a result, popular h ikin g trails in the Gorge were closed due to hazardscaused by the fires. M any people were left devastated and some even had to evacuate their hom es to escape theblaze. In the months following, people throughout the Portland metro area were im pacted as roads were closed and sm oke filled the air setting th e m ood for m any sad and frustrated Oregonians. Lindsay Curletto, a CCC admissions advisor fromTroutdale, recounts how she had to help her friends parents evacuate from the fire. Multnomah Falls, a popular tourist stop in the Columbia River Gorge, was one of the areas affected by last year’s forest fires. Though the Falls were saved from the fires, many of the surrounding hiking areas were badly damaged and are still closed to the public. “ W e heard news that m y room m ate’ s closed o ff. People in Oregon have a sense of parents, who live in Springdale, were in leveli evacuation (get ready to leave),” Curletto said. “ W e later got the call that his parents were suddenly from Level 1 to level3 (Get Out!) We shared ownership for natural areas. So m any people feel that it was stolen.” M any o f the popular trails are still closed. Places like Eagle Creek, w hich has a total of immediately drove from Troutdale to Corbett where his m om was. She was calm. She didn’t 10 trails, have been closed o ff and have yet to open. Firefighters were able to save most of believe that the fire was that close. By 5 a.m ., the local police came by and said the fire was M ultnomah Falls from beingbum ed, but it is still closed o ff to the public. Some areas in the Multnomah Falls hike are still too dangerous 25Ö feet away from their doorstep. W e ran around packing everything in the house... picking out what looked most important. I then helped m y roommate’s m om packher room and decide what was staying and what was going. Eventually we both stopped and to be used by the public. “ The Colum bia River Gorge is beautiful, easily accessible and a strong representation of the entire state,” said Oregon native Eric Muhr, founder o f Oregon Explored, the well looked at each other, and finally she broke know n In stagram page w ith m ore than down crying and felt real fear.” Few people were unaffected by the fire. 354,000 followers. “ S p e c ta c u la r c a n y o n s , c liffs , an d overlooks,” M uhr said. “ It’s a playground, a p arklan d , a n im p o rtan t co m m ercial thoroughfare, a destination and a w ay o f life. W e should be cautious but not fearful. The Gorge is a resource: economic, aesthetic, social, recreational (and maybe also spiritual). Eighteen-year-old Rachel Dickinson, b om and raised in Oregon said, “ I was so upset. A fter just hearing there w as a fire, I w as so worried m y favorite places w ould be destroyed beyond repair, or closed forever. I know it’s going to take a long tim e to grow backeverything that once was there, and it’s possible it w on’t return to the way it was in m y lifetim e... it’ s just so sad.’.’ Other people like Steve Schwindt, a nature photographer here in the Northwest, was left without words. “ It’s an incredible area that m any people have grown up hiking and loving over the years,” Schwindt said. “I’ve spent countless w eeken d s in there p h o to grap h in g the waterfalls and all o f a sudden it’s gone and Clackamas Print W e should pay attention to the best science we have in order to find a balance between hum an access so everyone can enjoy what we have and environm ent quality so ib is x F C in S |to C o n c o r d ia protected for years to com e.” M ost o f the hikes that have been closed are anticipated to open this summer, but be prepared for any changes. If you are planning to go h ikin g fo r spring break, visit www. fs.usda.gov/crgnsa for m ore inform ation uoi varsity and develop the skills you need to begin your career. Scholarships of $7,000 to $14,000 per year make a bachelor’s degree affordable. Block transfers and helpful transfer coordinators make the admission process easy. There’s even a $250 scholarship just for visiting campus. Call, click, or come by today. U N IV E R S IT Y FOR MORE INFORMATION: P O R T LA N D VISIT; WWW.TRANSFERTQCQNCQRDIACOM CALM 5Ö3-280-$5Q1 / 1 -800-32» -9371 EMAIL: ADMISSION@CU-PQRTLAND.EQV________________________ on closures. theclackam asprint.net ORÉGON ■? . !• 5; l U Nauti 14, 2018