The U.S. Forest Service said Sunday that the raging wildfire in Superior National Forest did not expand its reach over the weekend, but that's not dampening anxieties for people in the area who fear the dangerous tinder-dry conditions will remain through the fall.
"It is so brutally dry. We just aren't getting the rain. The woods look sad. The leaves are falling," said Susan Rian, owner of the Trestle Inn Restaurant & Saloon near Finland. "A month from now could be even scarier."
The slowdown in the growth of the Greenwood fire comes as precautionary evacuations are underway in the Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness, which has been closed to visitors for the first time in 45 years due to limited resources to address the fire threat. The 1 million-acre BWCA is within the boundaries of northeastern Minnesota's Superior National Forest.
The 14-square-mile Greenwood fire, the state's largest wildfire, in Superior National Forest was expanding by about 1,000 acres a day since it started Aug. 15. But after growing to nearly 7 square miles Thursday night and burning through Friday, the Forest Service reported an estimated fire footprint of 9,067 acres on Saturday. That acreage decreased to 8,862 as of Sunday afternoon after infrared mapping provided a more accurate footprint.
"They didn't see a lot of movement from the fire yesterday," Joanna Gilkeson, a public information officer for the Forest Service, said during a phone interview Sunday. "It was very, very active Friday and then kind of stayed in its footprint yesterday."
None of the Greenwood fire has been contained and several other smaller wildfires ignited by lightning strikes have been reported inside the BWCA.
Without significant rain in the forecast this week to bring relief amid the drought and heat, operations are focused on protecting structures along Hwy. 2 north of the fire along Slate Lake and to the east around McDougal Lake.
The highway is closed from Forest Hwy. 11 to Hwy. 1, which also is closed from New Tomahawk Road to Lankinen Road.