Fire officials aren’t “losing focus” of the Elk Fire and its potential spread

The Elk Fire in Sheridan, Wyoming is still burning and is less than 30 percent contained. There has been some major damage to ag operations, but fire officials say they are not losing focus.

“Even though we have this good plan built out, we are not losing focus of what’s going on further to the south. So if this continues to move south, we are continuing to look at Big Horn and also possibly extending the line further to the south. So we might see that coming in the future. Right now we’re feeling pretty good, but we are definitely not losing focus on what’s further to the south,” said Chief Mike Reed.

The Elk Fire has been burning since September 27th. So far, it has burned around 80,000 acres.

Related Stories
LSU economist Dr. Michael Deliberto says fewer planted acres could tighten supplies and support prices for producers.
Markets have been slow to respond as crop stress worsens across major winter wheat regions, where quality ratings have fallen to multi-decade lows.
Producers say limited moisture is creating major challenges for crops and irrigation heading into summer.
The family operation says recent storms brought needed rain but also major damage across the farm.
Several counties are reviewing disaster declarations. Crop insurance may help growers cover some costs.
With U.S. cattle supplies already tight, drought response remains a long-term supply issue.

LATEST STORIES BY THIS AUTHOR:

Secretary Brooke Rollins announced the distribution of a comprehensive memorandum on Friday in Fort Worth, at RFD-TV’s Rural Town Hall presented by the Western Caucus Foundation.
Producers using farm entities should review ownership, labor contributions, and FSA paperwork before September 15.
AFBF Economist Bernt Nelson discusses biosecurity to prevent New World Screwworm and financial tools to support livestock as eradication efforts continue.
On a year-over-year basis, final demand prices are up 6.5 percent, the largest annual increase since late 2022.
United Soybean Board Director and Missouri farmer Kyle Durham joins us to discuss farmer sentiment, alternative revenue programs, conservation incentives, domestic demand trends, and conditions on his farm this spring.