On his way to work Thursday, Ranchesterâs fire chief Jeff Barron couldnât help but smile when he saw big, fat raindrops landing on his windshield.
It was just a few, but behind those raindrops he could also see the entire face of the charred Bighorn Mountains, on fire now for three weeks.
The first thing Barron remembers doing was just breathing a big old sigh of relief.
The Elk Fire has consumed 96,000-plus acres of forest land to date and threatened all the small communities that lie at its feet, and itâs been keeping Barron and many other firefighters awake at night
A chilly and wet weather pattern couldnât have come soon enough for them. And as of noon Thursday, snow had started falling across northern Wyoming, including on the Elk Fire and the Pack Trail Fire, which have burned 96,000 acres in the Bighorns west of Sheridan and nearly 90,000 acres in the Bridger-Teton National Forest west of Dubois.
As soon as he could safely do so, Barron sent a text to his familyâs group chat talking about how amazing it was to see something so small which could make such a big difference to everyone living at the foot of the Bighorns.
âI correlated it back to God and family,â he said. âAnd how you can center yourself when youâre in chaos and the fires are burning, even in your own lives.â
The night leading up to those raindrops, though, was anything but calm.
Southwest wind gusts up to 30 mph kept firefighters lively on the northwestern corner of the Elk Fire, near Broderick Flat. Helicopters and air tankers dropped thousands of gallons of water and retardant in the area, while crews on the ground worked hard to maintain their containment lines.
In the south, a short-range spot fire was found in the grass, southeast of Big Goose Creek, during the day. Firefighters contained it to 2.5 acres overnight.
The majority of the fireâs 4,000-acre growth came on the western side of the fire. That created huge plumes of smoke visible for miles away in communities to the east, giving no one an easy nightâs rest.
The southwest wind pushed the fire backward into itself, igniting unburned fuels along the perimeter.
By Thursday afternoon, the snowfall in the area was making a difference, the Rocky Mountain Area Complex Incident Management Team reported.
"Moisture is falling across the fire!" the team reported. "Snow has started to accumulate across the fire area with up to an inch in some places already. Fire behavior is minimal and crews continue to work slowly and steadily monitoring conditions on the northwestern corner and along the southeastern side."
Not Just One, But Two Waves Of Moisture Are Ahead
The first few pattering of raindrops that Barron saw is just the beginning of what weather forecasters expect to land on the Elk Fire burning west of Sheridan and the Pack Trail fire burning west of Dubois.
The moisture is going to come across Wyoming at large in two waves, according to Cowboy State Dailyâs meteorologist Don Day.
Areas will get variable amounts of moisture from Cheyenne in the southeast to Cody and Powell in the northwest and to Sundance in the northeast and Evanston in the southwest. This signals a shift in weather patterns that heralds winter is on its way.
âThereâs a wave of moisture that will cut through today, then there will be a little bit of a break later this afternoon,â Day said.
The next wave of moisture will start developing overnight and run into early Friday. Accumulations have been predicted to range between 7 and 13 inches, but elevations will play a role in how big the accumulations are as well.
There will be less snow and rain at the lower elevations. At 7,000 feet and up, as much as 13 inches of snow are possible.
âThe amount of precipitation may not be as heavy, but it is going to be wet,â Day said. âAnd the way that this is developing, it really is giving these areas where there are fires the best it can in terms of its ability to help.â
The moisture overnight Thursday and Friday wonât be the season-ender that finally kills both the Elk and Pack Trail fires, Day said.
âBut itâs the beginning of the end of fire season,â he added.
Smoldering and smoke will continue throughout the day, according to the Elk Fire update from Rocky Mountain Area Complex Incident Management Team. But no growth in the fireâs perimeter is expected.
The âLet It Rainâ Concert
The end canât really come soon enough, Patty Caywood, owner of The Parkman Bar and Grill told Cowboy State Daily on Thursday.
She likes to be busy, but chaos is what she and everyone living at the base of the Bighorns have been dealing with since the Elk Fire began Sept. 27.
In the north, people living in Parkman and Dayton, have packed up belongings and evacuated, returned home, and then evacuated again.
In the south, in Big Horn and Story, volunteers have helpedclear flammable debris from the homes of elderly and disabled people, trying to get those homes ready to defend against the Elk Fire as it continued a seemingly unstoppable march south.
As Caywood watched raindrops spatter her office window in Sheridan, she, too, was all smiles.
âIâm hoping that this weather cooperates and that it tapers down the chaos thatâs been in our community and my life, and my husbandâs life, and our friends and family that have been having to deal with it,â she said. âHopefully the rain brings snow in the mountains, which is what weâre praying for.â
Caywoodâs bar has been planning a concert, aptly named âLet It Rain,â with members of the Munsick family.
âUsually, we donât want rain and snow when we have an event, but this time weâre welcoming it,â Caywood said. âWeâre open.â
The event will be a fundraiser to help with ongoing needs for fire-affected communities along the foot of the Bighorns. The Elk Fireâs days might be numbered, but its aftermath will linger long after the smoke is gone.
âThis fire has impacted our community full force,â Caywood said.
A Snowball Of Generosity
Caywood started a snowball of generosity when her bar decided to accept an anonymous donation to prepare meals for firefighters and so-called Hillbilly Hotshots â ranchers and others who have outfitted their trucks with water tanks to patrol their own and neighborsâ properties for any sign of smoke or fire.
They have been instrumental in saving homes in the Horseshoe Subdivisionas well as the Double Rafter Ranch
One little post on Facebook later, her bar was filled with a mountain of generosity â water bottles and Gatorade for volunteer firefighters, chips and baked items for snack bags, wipes and ChapStick, and all kinds of other things to help people either fighting the fire or affected by it.
There were so many donations, Caywood closed for regular business and turned her bar into a distribution center instead for a week or two. She has since reopened for regular business, but continues to prepare free meals for local firefighters, including the Hillbilly Hotshots.
The event Saturday is all about recognizing the community, the volunteers, the hotshots, and all the generous people who have contributed so much to help communities living at the foot of the Bighorns.
âWe decided to make the event more about the community, the volunteers, the hotshots, the local kids, the guys, the families, the husbands, wives, moms and dads,â Caywood said. âThe Munsicks are a local family that were based out of Dayton and the kids went to school in our area, the Tongue River District.â
Also Elated On Pack Trail Fire
The images of a snowy Highway 26 over Togwotee Pass running through the nearly 90,000-acre Pack Trail Fire is a huge emotional boost for the hundreds of firefighters working the incident.
Itâs also bringing smiles to those who have been living under the fireâs threat for weeks on end.
âItâs a big relief, for sure. Weâre seeing some good snow here,â said Natali Partigianoni, a bartender and hiking guide at Brooks Lake Lodge. âWeâre doing good here and getting booked for the winter.â
She said there was a lot of anticipation ahead of the storm, but to actually have snow falling on the fire is something the locals needed. They know itâs not going to put out the fire, but to have Mother Nature helping to suppress the fire rather than spread it is a relief, she said.
âWeâre really, really glad to see this snow,â she said.
That was echoed by the Great Basin Complex Incident Management Team 5, which took over management of the Pack Trail Fire from a California team Wednesday afternoon.
âReally nice to see some moisture coming out of the air,â said Operations Section Chief Kendal Wilson in his Thursday video update. âWe had a little bit of rain coming in at about 1 oâclock (in the morning), then some snow at about 4 a.m.â
The fire is still active âdown into the southern end of the fire,â he said, adding âthatâs where itâs giving us some trouble ⊠going south in to Buffalo Meadows down kind of by the Darwin Ranch area.â
Another active area has been around Bacon Creek, which is âwhere weâve seen most of the progression of the fire, where weâre still working the heavy aircraft.â
But the snow is the big story of the day for folks fighting both fires, Wilson said. While it was expected, they didnât want to get their hopes up until the snow actually started to fall.
âPlan for the worst and expect the best,â he said.
Renée Jean can be reached at renee@cowboystatedaily.com.