Chicken farm fire on the 200 block of Gore Road. / Courtesy photo by Rhonda Volk
Updated at 5:49 p.m.
By Sharyn L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter
CHEHALIS – The fire believed to have been sparked by a tractor-brush hog operating in a field in Onalaska destroyed a dozen chicken barns and burned 175 acres of property.
Crews are still on the scene this morning.
“Everything is black, burned, but nothing right now is causing any major hazard,” Lewis County Fire District 8 Chief Duran McDaniel said this morning.
It was reported shortly after 2 p.m. yesterday at the Neilson’s chicken farm on the 200 block of Gore Road.
Crews created what McDaniel called a wet line to protect the farm and also to keep fire from getting to an 18,000 gallon propane tank.
McDaniel and two of his firefighters were putting water down around the tank when flames about 25 feet tall rolled over the fire break towards them, he said. Some neighbors were in the area as well, he said.
“We left on foot,” McDaniel said. “There was probably six or seven of us that ran out of there.”
They left behind a 2,500 gallon fire engine-tender that was destroyed, he said.
McDaniel called for everyone – fire personnel and residents alike – to evacuate the area for at least a half mile away from the propane tank, and then enlarged the zone to a mile, he said.
“The size of it, if it blew, it would have launched itself about a mile,” he said.
McDaniel at that point requested help from every fire chief in Lewis County. Assistance came that included fire tenders from all or almost all departments in the county, as well as two from Thurston County and two from Cowlitz County, he said.
Firefighters with the state Department of Natural Resources responded as well, he said.
The firefighting effort couldn’t continue until after a DNR helicopter was able to observe that the only thing still left burning near the tank was the fire truck, he said.
Homes in the area of the fire have Onalaska addresses, but are protected by the Lewis County Fire District 8, based in Salkum.
The farmer’s house was saved as was a neighbor’s barn and several other structures, according to McDaniel.
But 12 large chicken buildings were lost; eight of them occupied by poultry, he said.
Nobody was injured, but two firefighters became overheated, he said.
Critical fire weather conditions are expected to continue through the weekend, according to the state Department of Natural Resources.
DNR is warning the public to take every available precaution to protect themselves during what they call emergency conditions.
All available resources, both statewide and nationally, are already deployed fighting wildfires across the American West, according to Carrie McCausland, DNR’s deputy director of communications.
More than 1,000 firefighters are battling 10 large wildfires on the other side of the mountains, where more than 120,000 acres have burned.
Three U.S. Forest Service firefighters were killed yesterday fighting fires in Okanogan County, and other federal and state wildland firefighters were burned or injured.
McCausland urges members of the public to take any evacuation order or emergency direction with the utmost seriousness.
Most firefighting agencies have, by necessity, adopted a defensive posture to contain the already overwhelming spread of wildfires, she stated in a news release this morning.
A fire that broke out a week and a half ago south of Gish Road in Onalaska scorched 102 acres of private property and at one point had about 170 personnel assigned to it.
On Aug. 5, approximately 50 DNR firefighters were working about four miles north of the Gish Road fire to extinguish 18 acres of burning brush and trees off Centralia-Alpha Road.
After District 8’s call for assistance yesterday, the Chehalis Fire Department was put on standby to answer any other calls as far away as Mossyrock, wherever they might be needed.
Lewis County Sheriff’s Office Cmdr. Dusty Breen said deputies provided traffic control and helped with evacuations.
Breen said it appeared the fire originated with the tractor-brush hog, but they are conducting an investigation.
U.S. Highway 12 was closed at Leonard Road in Ethel, and then expanded to reach from Jackson Highway at Mary’s Corner to Fuller Road in Salkum.
Gore Road was shut down at Fred Plant Road on the east end to Leonard Road at the west end; and Leonard’s closure extended north to Gish Road.
The Lewis County 911 center put out reverse 911 calls to advise residents in the area to evacuate beginning just after 3 p.m. and ending at 7:45 p.m. The Code Red emergency alert warning system is available to those who register their phone numbers with it.
McDaniel said it wasn’t until about 11 p.m. they felt like the fire was under control enough to wrap up for the night.
DNR is estimating the fire is 50 to 60 percent contained this morning.
District 8’s fire engine-tender that burned is worth about $350,000, according to McDaniel.
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For background, read “Breaking news: Large fire prompts evacuations near Ethel” from Wednesday August 19, 2015, here
Deputies and firefighters knocked on doors for an evacuation of one mile in every direction after fire rolled over an 18,000 gallon propane tank. / Courtesy photo by John Cleveland