Current:Home > MyDeer take refuge near wind turbines as fire scorches Washington state land -AssetVision
Deer take refuge near wind turbines as fire scorches Washington state land
View
Date:2025-04-17 01:47:17
SEATTLE (AP) — Bjorn Hedges drove around the two wind farms he manages the morning after a wildfire raced through. At many of the massive turbines he saw deer: does and fawns that had found refuge on gravel pads at the base of the towers, some of the only areas left untouched amid an expanse of blackened earth.
“That was their sanctuary — everything was burning around them,” Hedges said Monday, two days after he found the animals.
Crews continued fighting the Newell Road Fire by air and by ground in rural south-central Washington state, just north of the Columbia River, amid dry weather and high wind gusts. Over the weekend, fire threatened a solar farm along with a natural gas pipeline and a plant at a landfill that converts methane to energy.
Related stories CLIMATE GLIMPSE: Here’s what you need to see and know today Additional evacuations are needed as fires rage on the Greek island of Rhodes, tearing past defenses. They’re fueled by strong winds and successive heat waves. Fire still blazing on the Greek island of Rhodes as dozens more erupt across the country Firefighters are struggling through the night to contain 82 wildfires across Greece, 64 of which started Sunday, the hottest day of the summer so far. Fire officials unable to find cause of 2022 northern Arizona wildfire that destroyed 30 homes The U.S. Forest Service has announced it was unable to determine the cause of a wildfire in northern Arizona that destroyed 30 homes last year.Firefighters responded quickly and stopped the flames before damage was done to those facilities, said Allen Lebovitz, wildland fire liaison for the Washington Department of Natural Resources.
Residents of an unknown number of homes, “maybe hundreds,” near the small community of Bickleton had been given notices to evacuate, Lebovitz said. Some residences burned, but crews had not been able to determine how many.
The wildfire, which was burning in tall grass, brush and timber, also threatened farms, livestock and crops. It had burned about 81 square miles (210 square kilometers).
The fire began Friday afternoon and quickly raced across the White Creek Wind and Harvest Wind projects, where Hedges works as plant manager. Together the farms have 132 turbines and supply enough power for about 57,000 homes.
The turbines typically shut down automatically when their sensors detect smoke, but that emergency stop is hard on the equipment, Hedges said, so workers pulled the turbines offline as the fire approached. They were back to mostly normal operations Monday, though the turbines likely needed their air filters replaced, he said.
“We’re probably safer now than we’ve ever been,” Hedges said. “There’s no fuel remaining. It scorched everything.”
veryGood! (1)
Related
- IRS recovers $4.7 billion in back taxes and braces for cuts with Trump and GOP in power
- McCarthy floats stopgap funding to prevent a government shutdown at the end of next month
- Little League won't have bunk beds at 2023 World Series after player injury
- Deja Taylor, Virginia mother whose 6 year old son shot teacher Abby Zwerner pleads guilty
- Could your smelly farts help science?
- As people fled the fires, pets did too. Some emerged with marks of escape, but many remain lost.
- University presidents elevate free speech under new partnership
- Ex-FBI counterintelligence official pleads guilty to conspiracy charge for helping Russian oligarch
- Trump invites nearly all federal workers to quit now, get paid through September
- From Vine to Friendster, a look back on defunct social networking sites we wish still existed
Ranking
- Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow owns a $3 million Batmobile Tumbler
- Toyota, Chrysler among nearly 270,000 vehicles recalled last week: Check car recalls here.
- Judge blocks Internet Archive from sharing copyrighted books
- Despite the Hollywood strike, some movies are still in production. Here's why
- Trump invites nearly all federal workers to quit now, get paid through September
- Clarence Avant, record executive known as the Godfather of Black Music, dies at age 92
- Nestlé recalls Toll House cookie dough bars because they may contain wood fragments
- Oprah, Meryl Streep, Michael B. Jordan to be honored at Academy Museum Gala
Recommendation
Selena Gomez engaged to Benny Blanco after 1 year together: 'Forever begins now'
Duke Energy prefers meeting North Carolina carbon target by 2035, but regulators have final say
American industrial icon US Steel is on the verge of being absorbed as industry consolidates further
Air pollution may be to blame for thousands of dementia cases each year, researchers say
Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
Number of dead from Maui wildfires reaches 99, as governor warns there could be scores more
China arrests military industry worker on accusations of spying for the CIA
Game of Thrones Actor Darren Kent Dead at 36