
Flash with a smoky background, looking close to straight south from Spring Creek Basin to the southern ridges of Disappointment Valley.
The Ferris Fire merged with the Far Draw Fire on Sunday morning … and by Sunday evening, the nearby Doe Canyon Fire had merged with the others, so now it’s all one big fire (being called, collectively, the Ferris Fire), and it was at almost 14,500 acres by last night. Awful south/southwest/southeast (yep; it keeps switching) winds are driving this fire and probably every other fire at least in western Colorado and eastern Utah right now.
The fire(s) and smoke continue to move in a northeasterly direction, and mid-lower Disappointment Valley and Spring Creek Basin actually are not nearly as smoky as upper Disappointment Valley.
The mustangs are OK. Really, they’re pretty unphased, as far as I can tell. I spent time last evening with Flash’s band, and I saw several other bands going about their business of grazing and moving to and away from water sources.
The Gold Mountain Fire also started Saturday in Ouray County, near the town of Ouray, and a stretch of U.S. Highway 550 is closed in that area. Friends we visited in Ridgway on Saturday could see flames from that fire from their respective homes after we left.
Tragically, three firefighters died and two more are hospitalized from injuries suffered fighting the Snyder Mesa Fire on the Utah-Colorado border almost directly west of Grand Junction. Heartbreaking.

The smoke isn’t really discernible in this pic post-sunset (hard to tell as the sun sank again into a smokebank), but that rising moon, nearly full, is red through a layer of smoke. Noooooootttt the moonrise pic I had pictured for this month.
The mustangs are OK, and we’re watching the progress of the fires and keeping an eye on that smoke. Firefighters should make some progress when the horriblebadawful wind dies down. Think safety for all involved.


















