FROM PAGE ONE Wallowa.com Wednesday, July 28, 2021 A5 Gains: Continued from Page A1 crews were up to 28% con- tainment and had conducted a successful burnout oper- ation in the Elbow Creek area. Friday and Saturday The fi re saw decent growth of roughly 1,000 to 1,500 acres a day on both Friday and Saturday, and it reached 21,928 acres as of Saturday’s report. Friday, it had been at 20,810. Con- tainment of the fi re was up to 25%. “Night operations were successful,” the team stated Saturday. “No substan- tial growth of the fi re was observed. Overall, things are going well with no major concerns for (Saturday’s) operations.” Crews worked to strengthen “Plan B” contin- gency lines, and performed small burnout operations to increase containment line security. On Friday, Wallowa County Emergency Man- agement lowered evacuation notices. Troy, which Thurs- day was lowered from Level 3 to Level 2, was dropped to Level 1 “Get Ready.” Prom- ise and Eden Bench, which were at Level 3, dropped to Level 2 “Get Set.” And Flora, which Thursday had been dropped to Level 1, Weer: Continued from Page A1 are about 1,000 fi refi ghters on the entire fi re. “And that’s continuing to grow by the hour,” he said. Deedon said that with resources in Oregon becom- ing more scarce, aid is com- ing from other states. While in the Promise area Thurs- day, several trucks from Idaho passed by. He said there also are resources from Arizona and even a PIO from Louisiana. Contract fi refi ghter Another fi refi ghter told how diffi cult the work is. Juan Mora, of Salem, has been battling blazes since 2000 and is now a con- tract fi refi ghter. He arrived on the fi re early Thursday and began checking out the situation. “It’s hard work. … I like to check the whole ground I’m going to be working on fi rst,” Mora said from Sloan Point, a staging area for Division Whiskey. He said highly trained hotshot fi re- fi ghters were down Gross- man Creek. “It looks like it’s holding, but you never know with the winds you’ve had. It could pick up,” he said. “You do put in work. It’s not just a hike in the woods. We take it seriously. We work all year long on the forests. We plant, we thin, it’s not just a hike in the woods. It’s a lot of stuff like dry-mopping and harder stuff .” Dry-mopping, he said, is to use a pulaski to dig 2 feet of dirt to cover any burning Pennie Rials/Contributed Photo A hay barn owned by the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife from which elk are fed. Spared: Continued from Page A1 Inciweb.com/Screenshot The latest mapping of the Elbow Creek Fire has it at 22,790 acres and 38% contained as of Tuesday, July 27, 2021. had that notice lifted. Thursday Crews worked to contain the fi re in drainages at Sick- foot and Grossman creeks and as it started to spread into Elbow Creek as the approached 20,000 acres, but by Thursday night, during a virtual commu- nity update Operations Sec- tion Chief Eric Perkins said “things are looking good right now” in those areas that had given fi refi ghters a challenge. Perkins said that fi re pro- gression had been “pretty much stopped” in the area of Sickfoot Creek at the south- ern edge of the blaze. Fire progression had also been slowed in the Gross- man Creek area, and along the Grande Ronde River, spread has been slowed, he said. Incident Commander Link Smith said Thursday he was impressed with the size the fi re has been held to. “Most of this fi re is in really good shape,” he said, though at the time he cau- tioned that “we’re not out of the woods yet. We’re in a really tough spot here in Elbow Creek.” or fl ammable material. “What you’re doing is taking out the oxygen from the fi re,” he said. Bringing it home But knowing the people here brings it home all the more. “When the fi re’s in your own back yard, per se, I don’t want to say it’s more import- ant — all fi res are import- ant — but I have a lot more ownership in it locally,” Jeff Weer said. “There are peo- ple out here who have lost a family cabin and I’m friends with those folks, so that hits harder.” While proud of the eff orts of her husband and other fi re- fi ghters, wife Maria is still concerned for their safety. “I do worry about their safety, but I know that they train to be as safe as possi- ble,” she said. She also emphasized the support off ered by the community. “We’re thankful for the community support. Peo- ple always reaching out to see if I need help with car- pools and the like,” she said. “People are supportive of the fi refi ghters, but they’re also supportive of those of us at home.” Jeff Weer emphasized that fi refi ghters in Wallowa County have a good relation- ship with their colleagues from elsewhere. “We have a really good working relationship with our ODF (Oregon Depart- ment of Forestry) partners in Wallowa County,” Jeff said. “We’re kind of land- locked up here so we rely heavily on each other for mutual aid.” unbelievable,” she said, adding the aerial attack was key. “Without them, I think everybody would have burned.” Farther upriver, Gary and Pennie Rials were ready to evacuate — and were in the Level 3 param- eters — but elected to wait it out. The couple’s home along the Grande Ronde River is about 3 miles southwest of Troy and a few miles away from Wild- cat Creek, the easternmost point of the fi re. “We’re 5 miles from Wildcat Creek. It was com- ing down our way,” Pennie Rials said. “It was getting kind of close. It turned and went the other way.” She said the couple would have evacuated if they had seen the fi re get- ting closer. “If it would have come over the hill here called Peacock … if we would have seen fl ames, we were leaving,” she said. Rials said Gary was keeping their property wet throughout the duration in case the fi re did close in. “We have a ranch, so my husband has been keeping the water going the whole time,” she said. “That is the only way we could have saved this place is keeping it wet.” With the fi re now largely burning in the opposite direction of the Rials’ home, the couple drove up Eden Bench to see the aftermath, and to inform residents who were not present that their homes — or, in some instances, vaca- tion homes — had made it. “I’ve been trying to keep people kind of alerted about what’s going on,” Rials said. She, too, had high praise for the crews who fought the blaze. “I couldn’t believe up on Eden Bench the job those guys have done. It’s unbelievable,” she said Wednesday. “The fi remen, they are still up there, and they have done a great job.” Both also credited Ron Kellermann, a Joseph res- ident who had been work- ing in the area and who ran a dozer along Eden Bench, with helping spare homes. “He was right on it,” Shirley Hone said. Find Your Business in the Winners Bracket With an ad in the Chieftain YOUR BUSINESS Advertise during Chief Joseph Days! To place an ad contact Jennifer Cooney TODAY! jcooney@ wallowa.com • 541-805-9630 Ben Lonergan/East Oregonian 209 NW First St., Enterprise •541-426-4567 wallowa.com Smoke clouds trees near the Bar B Ranch on Thursday, July 22, 2021 at the Elbow Creek Fire. Ann Bloom has brought her Food & Nutrition Programs to Alt Ed, After-School Programs and Summer Exploration. She also participates in community events such as Kidfest and Farmer’s Market. Ann has volunteered to be a mentor and support BHF in a number of ways. Thank you Ann, we are so lucky to have you! 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