Oklahoma, Kansas Wildfires Contained

Starbuck fire burned over 1,200 square miles

Kansas Sen. Pat Roberts, left, hugs longtime friend Carol Swayze on her ranch near Bucklin, Kan., that was burned by a wildfire. While Swayze lost many other buildings on the ranch, quick action saved the cattle herd. Roberts was in Kansas on Friday afternoon touring the area ravaged by fire earlier this week. (Bo Rader/The Wichita Eagle via AP)

 

GATE, Okla. (AP) — Oklahoma Forestry Services says four wildfires in northwestern Oklahoma and southwestern Kansas are now 42 percent contained, but a high fire danger continues in the region.

The agency said Monday that the largest fire is the Starbuck fire that began near Gate and has burned more than 1,200 square miles in Oklahoma and Kansas and is blamed for one death in each state. In Oklahoma, the 283 fire near Laverne has burned 108 square miles; the Selman fire near Fort Supply has burned 74 square miles; and the Beaver fire between Beaver and Elmwood has burned just more than 4½ square miles.

See also  NFPA, State Farm Announce Recipients of 2021 Wildfire Community Preparedness Day Project Awards

A suspected cause of the fires has not been released.

OFS says firefighters continue patrolling the fires, putting out hotspots and working to improve containment of the flames.

Copyright 2017 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Topics

Subscribe to Our Monthly Newsletter

Stay in the loop with our wildland newsletter.

Starbuck fire burned over 1,200 square miles   GATE, Okla. (AP) — Oklahoma Forestry Services says four wildfires in northwestern Oklahoma and southwestern Kansas are now 42 percent contained, but a high fire danger continues in the region. The agency said Monday that the largest fire is the Starbuck fire that began near Gate and […]

Get The Wildland Firefighter Newsletter

Related Articles

Dealing With The Insanity

Dealing With The Insanity

Dealing With The Insanity If you’re a federal wildland firefighter, you must feel like you’re getting whiplash from all the news coming from the politicians and bureaucrats in D.C. We were all excited awhile back when the temporary pay increase became permanent. If...