Crews have mostly contained a massive northern Wyoming wildfire that ignited less than a week ago, authorities said Monday. 

But other fires in the area, including two burning in Campbell County and one in Sheridan County, continue to grow. A fifth major blaze near the Continental Divide, meantime, continues to affect the northwest corner of the state.

Combined, the four northern Wyoming wildfires have consumed 448,300 acres in northern Wyoming and southern Montana since Wednesday, according to the federal team now overseeing the effort to suppress them. That’s about three times the size of Chicago. 

The fires include:

  • House Draw near Buffalo, which has burned 175,000 acres and is 88% contained.
  • Flat Rock near Gillette, which has now burned 52,600 acres and is 35% contained. The blaze grew nearly 11,000 acres between Sunday and Monday.
  • Constitution near Gillette, which has burned 24,600 acres and is 28% contained. It nearly doubled in size between Sunday and Monday’s status updates.
  • Remington in northern Sheridan County and southern Montana,  which has burned 196,400 acres with no containment. The majority of the fire has burned on the Montana side of the border.

There have been no reported injuries related to the fires. 

Smoke rises from a wildfire burning in Campbell County. (Campbell County Fire Department)

Fire officials are still gathering information regarding damage caused by the blazes, but there haven’t been reports yet of destroyed homes, said Ansgar Mitchell, a public information officer for Southwest Area Incident Management Team No. 5, which is managing the suppression effort. The House Draw Fire did burn some outbuildings, fences and infrastructure in the area, a spokeswoman for Johnson County Fire told WyoFile last week.

A pilot performs reconnaissance of the Remington Fire. (Inciweb)

Still, the relative lack of destruction is notable, given the size and speed of the fires. House Draw, for example, exploded in size on Thursday, running for miles north across Interstate 90 and south nearly to Kaycee. There’s been considerable containment of the fire since then, Brandon Glenn, who’s involved in planning ops for the Southwest team, explained in a Monday morning briefing.

“They’ve been doing a lot of good work on that for the last several days,” he said.

The fires had prompted evacuations, but as of Monday morning, no such orders were in effect for Sheridan, Johnson or Campbell counties, fire officials said. Level 2 evacuation orders — which require residents to be ready to leave at a moment’s notice — are in effect in three Montana counties: Big Horn, Rosebud and Powder River.

Fish Creek Fire

A fifth major wildfire, the Fish Creek Fire, is burning near Togwotee Pass in northwestern Wyoming. It has so far charred 11,300 acres and led to the repeat closure of U.S. Highway 26/287, which is a major route for drivers traveling to Jackson and Yellowstone and Grand Teton National parks. About a quarter of the fire was contained as of Monday morning, according to an update released by Northern Rockies Complex Incident Management Team No. 1. 

The Fish Creek Fire south of Togwotee Pass produced a spectacular smoke column as seen in this photograph the Forest Service posted Saturday. (BTNF)

The Brooks Lake, Pinnacle Drive and Breccia Drive areas remain under a level 2 evacuation notice. 

Lightning has been blamed for igniting all of the fires save the Remington, the cause of which has yet to be determined. 

The large fires are by no means the only ones burning in the state right now. Crews in Weston County alone responded to 17 wildfires between Wednesday and Sunday, its fire protection district reported.

Governor responds

With so much of Wyoming burning, Gov. Mark Gordon said he’s providing all available state critical fire resources. They’re teaming with local and federal crews to battle the blazes.

More than 1,170 firefighters were working the five blazes, as of Monday morning. They’re being aided by a number of aircraft including air tankers and helicopters.

“Confronting fires of this size and battling against Mother Nature’s forces takes significant dedication from those on the frontlines. Thank you to all who are fighting these fires — both volunteer and full-time firefighters  — you are protecting our livelihoods, homes, and landscapes,” the governor said in a statement. “[First Lady] Jennie [Gordon] and I send our prayers to everyone impacted.”

Crews work along a fence line as they work to suppress the House Draw Fire near Buffalo. (Kyle Jarvis/Johnson County Fire)

Gordon said several factors are contributing to the string of major wildfires. A wet 2023 created an abundance of fuels. Lightning from passing thunderstorms are igniting that fuel, and the state’s notoriously strong winds are driving the flames.

Wyoming is experiencing a typical number of wildfires this year, Gordon said, but they’re burning more acreage than usual. As of Friday afternoon, 522 wildfires had burned 327,000 acres in the state — an area roughly half the size of Rhode Island — so far this year.

Joshua Wolfson serves as WyoFile's editor-in-chief. He lives in Casper. Contact him at josh@wyofile.com.

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  1. I agree with Mr Vanderhoff’s comment. The other shoe is gonna drop. There are plenty of smart creative people in this state, likely at UW in Laramie, who have some ideas about how Wyoming can thrive without coal, oil or gas. How long will Wyoming stack its legislature with those who believe we can continue to live in our own little fossil fuel nirvana? The world is different now, with climate change, in countless ways. When are Wyomingites going to get the picture? Wake up and smell the smoke….

  2. I guess this is all one big laboratory for testing numerous hypotheses on the value of wildfirefire in landscape ecology over time. Crocodile tears for all the Cheatgrass that got cremated.

    One point I would like to arch over the top of all the angst about 2024’s surge in wildfires across the entire US , starting everywhere else but now razing Wyoming. We’ve been more lucky than not in recent years , but that can’t last. The current spate of fires is a forewarning. The message is Climate Change amplifies wildfires. The thesis is by continuing to promote carbon based energy and demanding the rest of the world keep buying our fossil fuels for the sake of a few jobs and easy outside money for state government , Wyoming makes it worse for everyone everywhere. We are the problem . Wyoming resists the obvious solutions , but mitigation and/or punitive damages will eventually be forced on us. Stubbornly refusing to quit using fossil thinking about fossil fuels only prolongs the inevitable dark fate for Wyoming. What good does it do to stand our ground on coal, gas, and oil if the ground gets burned black and the state economy with it ? We had a long time and much incentive to develop Plan B and Plan C for future Wyoming , but we squandered it , in denial. The firebirds are coming home to roost.

    1. Climate change ? There’s those words of nature. The climate has NEVER remained the same. Proof is under your feet ! We are here for a minut of earth’s lifetime. We will diminish from earth like all living creatures. Man changed the the landscape, nature will take it back.. New life will breath. Yet environmentalists scream to much CO² ! Funny, without it not one plant survives! Which means no human shall exist ! Yet they keep screaming. Who taught these people? More so, how much “pollution” not just CO² are these fires releasing? Answer me that.