
A Grand Canyon Access Point Is Closed as 19,000 Acres Burn Nearby
The fire, known as the White Sage fire, started on Wednesday evening with a lightning strike near Fredonia, Ariz., according to the Bureau of Land Management. As of Saturday, the fire had burned 19,153 acres and was zero percent contained.
The fire was not burning within Grand Canyon National Park, the park said.
The access point to the park, the North Rim, was closed starting on Thursday, and all visitors had to evacuate, according to a National Park Service news release.
The access site remained closed to visitors until further notice, the park said on Saturday on Facebook. The North Kaibab Trail was temporarily closed north of Manzanita Rest Area.
The North Rim, which is about 84 miles from the Utah border, is open seasonally and draws 10 percent of the visitors to the Grand Canyon. In 2024, nearly five million people visited the park.
Another fire, also started by lightning, was burning 5,000 acres inside of the Grand Canyon National Park.
That fire, the Dragon Bravo fire, started on July 4, according to a wildfire tracking website.
Containment of the Dragon Bravo fire on Saturday was at zero percent. Two helicopters were being brought in Saturday to help suppress the fire.
Smoke from the fire was visible from the South Rim, the park's more popular access point, which remained open.
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A historic Grand Canyon lodge has been destroyed by wildfire, an official says
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Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
An official says a historic Grand Canyon lodge has been destroyed by wildfire
GRAND CANYON NATIONAL PARK, Ariz. (AP) — A historic lodge on the Grand Canyon's North Rim has been destroyed by a fast-moving wildfire, the park said Sunday. The Grand Canyon Lodge, the only lodging inside the park at the North Rim, was consumed by the flames, park Superintendent Ed Keeble told park residents, staff and others in a meeting Sunday morning. He said the visitor center, the gas station, a waste water treatment plant, an administrative building and some employee housing also were lost. Two wildfires are burning at or near the North Rim, known as the White Sage Fire and the Bravo Dragon fire. The latter is the one that impacted the lodge and other structures. The park initially was managing it as a controlled burn but then shifted to suppression as it rapidly grew, fire officials said. Millions of people visit Grand Canyon National Park annually, with most going to the more popular South Rim. The North Rim is open seasonally. It was evacuated last Thursday because of wildfire. The burning of the water treatment plant resulted in the release of chlorine gas that prompted the evacuation of firefighters and hikers from the inner canyon, park officials said Sunday. Chlorine gas is heavier than air and can quickly settle into lower elevations such as the inner canyon, posing a health risk. Meanwhile, officials reported progress in battling a second wildfire burning north of the Grand Canyon. Fire lines on the White Sage Fire that forced evacuations at the North Rim and in the community of Jacob Lake were holding, officials said. On the southern edge of the fire, hand crews and bulldozers were working uphill, and the spread of the blaze had been minimal. But to the east and north, the fire has spread rapidly, with grasses and standing dead trees contributing to the fire's intensity, officials said. The fire was pushing downhill toward the Vermilion Cliffs area, and crews were assessing opportunities to create buffer zones that help slow or halt the fire's progress.


Washington Post
2 hours ago
- Washington Post
An official says a historic Grand Canyon lodge has been destroyed by wildfire
GRAND CANYON NATIONAL PARK, Ariz. — A historic lodge on the Grand Canyon's North Rim has been destroyed by a fast-moving wildfire, the park said Sunday. The Grand Canyon Lodge, the only lodging inside the park at the North Rim, was consumed by the flames, park Superintendent Ed Keeble told park residents, staff and others in a meeting Sunday morning. He said the visitor center, the gas station, a waste water treatment plant, an administrative building and some employee housing also were lost.