2024 Colorado wildfires

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2024 Colorado wildfires
The Spruce Creek Fire, which burnt 5,699 acres of land in the San Juan National Forest
Season
 2023
2025 

The 2024 Colorado wildfire season was a series of wildfires that burned in the U.S. state of Colorado during 2024.

While "fire season" varies every year in Colorado, most wildfires occur in between May and September, but there is a fire risk year-round. Large wildfires have become more common mostly because of drought, high winds, and vegetation growth. Climate change has increased temperatures and decreased humidity in Colorado and sometimes reduces spring snowmelt, both of which contribute to fire conditions.[1]

Summary

By early August, Colorado tallied a substantial share of wildfire activity across the western United States, with the Front Range region particularly hard hit. The Bucktail Fire, which began on August 1 in Montrose County, ultimately burned 7,202 acres, making it the second-largest blaze of the season and causing criminal charges when it was found to have been accidentally started during an attempt to cremate a dog.[2] Even earlier, the Spruce Creek Fire, ignited by lightning in mid-May near Dolores, charred 5,699 acres—the season's first major wildfire—before being fully contained by the end of May.[3]

That spring and summer period was marked by volatile conditions, with rapid fire spread spurred by dry fuels, high winds, and low humidity. The Alexander Mountain Fire, which started near Loveland in late July, burned over 9,000 acres and destroyed dozens of homes, prompting aggressive containment strategies including backburning near Drake.[4] Another grim development occurred along the Front Range, where the Stone Canyon Fire, at roughly 1,500 acres, killed one person and destroyed five structures, leading officials to caution that resources were stretched thin across multiple simultaneous incidents.[5]

List of wildfires

The following is a list of fires that burned more than 1,000 acres (400 ha), or produced significant structural damage or casualties.

Name County Acres Start date Containment date[a] Notes Ref
Range 153 El Paso1,816February 25March 5Human-caused about 10 miles (16 km) southwest of Fountain.[7][8]
Range 135 El Paso7,744February 29March 5[7]
Boggsville Bent1,062March 2March 18Burned about 2 miles (3.2 km) south of Las Animas. Closed State Highway 101 and U.S. Route 50 and prompted evacuations for Las Animas.[7][9][10]
Range 127 El Paso1,132April 15May 13Human-caused. Burned near Fort Carson.[7][11]
Spruce Creek Montezuma5,699May 14May 31Caused by lightning 11 miles (18 km) northeast of Dolores.[12][13]
Rabbit Valley Mesa1,505June 17June 20Burned near Utah border[14][15]
Oak Ridge Pueblo, Custer1,310June 22July 24Caused by lightning 3 miles (4.8 km) northeast of Beulah.[16]
104 Weld1,782July 28July 31[7]
Alexander Mountain Larimer9,668July 29August 17[17][18][19]
Stone Canyon Boulder1,557July 30August 4Burned outside of Lyons. Destroyed six structure and killed one person. Undetermined cause.[20][21][22]
Bucktail Montrose7,078August 1August 21Started by a man attempting to cremate his dog. Damaged one structure.[23][24]
Big Gulch Moffat1,164August 7August 9Likely caused by lightning.[7][25]
Wildhorse 5 Weld1,200September 29October 1Human-caused. Burned 10 miles (16 km) north of Briggsdale in Pawnee National Grassland.[26][27]
Perimeters of 2024 Colorado wildfires (map data)

See also

Notes

References

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