As Otis residents return to begin recovery from fire’s carnage “Everything looks so normal … and then you turn the corner”

Quinton Smith The Echo Mountain fire burned 29 of the 31 homes in the Salmon River Mobile Village on the north side of Oregon Highway 18.

 

By QUINTON SMITH/YachatsNews.com

Even the cursory checkpoints manned by Oregon National Guard members don’t quite prepare you for what you’ll see a mile down North Bank Road in Otis.

The first sign of the fire that ripped through the community on Sept. 9 appears as burned underbrush on the north side of the road leading into the heart of the residential area.

“Be ready for what’s next,” says Jamie Knight, the Oregon Department of Forestry information officer escorting a one-hour trip Saturday into the heart of the Echo Mountain fire.

The carnage becomes visible at North Kokanee Lane.


This video was taken Saturday, Sept. 19, 2020

Quinton Smith The Echo Mountain fire raced through the Salmon River Mobile Village about 3 a.m. Wednesday, Sept. 9 — but left untouched homes on the north side of the Salmon River.

Residents of the area were allowed back from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday and Sunday to inspect their burned or still-standing houses. Except for the occasional fire patrol, everyone else was kept out for six hours – including Pacific Power crews still trying to fix lines and equipment.

It was designed to let homeowners take stock. To mourn their loss alone, or marvel that the rampaging fire somehow spared their property. On Monday roadblocks were removed and homeowners allowed to return to their houses — or begin cleaning up their destroyed homes and begin the long process of recovery.

Compared to the 200,000-acre behemoths that burned near Estacada, in the Santiam and McKenzie river canyons, and in Talent/Phoenix in southern Oregon, the Echo Mountain fire in Otis and the Kimberling fire in Rose Lodge were tiny – 2,500 acres.

But the Echo Mountain fire burned through an area dotted with small subdivisions of manufactured homes carved into the forest north of the Salmon River. It then jumped Oregon Highway 18 and skipped up the steep hill into the Highland Heights residential area, which is filled with bigger homes and lots of trees and thick underbrush.

The fire only stopped its westward march when it crossed a small section of East Devils Lake Road and burned an empty, brush-filled lot at the north end of Devils Lake.

It officially started at 11:53 p.m. on Labor Day, Sept. 7.

Fire officials don’t yet know, or won’t yet say, what caused it. But it wasn’t until an unusual 50 mph east wind overnight Sept. 8-9 that the fire took off and raced northeast-to-southwest diagonally through the Salmon River canyon. Embers went airborne and landed as far west as the Chinook Winds golf course on the edge of Lincoln City. That — and power outages — spurred the evacuation of the north part of town, including a hospital, nursing home, businesses and motels, and hundreds of homes.

The ODF says there were 1,241 structures – homes, barns, sheds – in the area. The two fires destroyed or damaged 25 percent of them.


This video was taken Saturday, Sept. 19, 2020

But unlike the other major fires burning in Oregon, the Lincoln County blazes did not kill anyone.

“It’s a miracle that we are able to report that there are no fatalities associated with this incident,” said Rick Dolan, the ODF’s fire commander.

An Oregon Department of Forestry map shows the footprint of the Echo Mountain and Kimberling fires along Oregon Highway 18.

At its height, 600 people were battling the fires, including an ODF management team from LaGrande, local fire districts, and personnel and equipment from large forestland owners.

Communities throughout Lincoln County rallied to support people who have lost their homes or were evacuated. The American Red Cross is still providing some sort of housing for 300 people. Centers to distribute donated goods have been set up in Lincoln City and Rose Lodge.

Quinton Smith Members of the Oregon National Guard staff a checkpoint Saturday at Old Scenic Highway 101 and North Bank Road, allowing residents in to see their property but keeping others away.

The Lincoln County School District – which starts online classes Monday – is trying to help more than 30 students and three staff members who lost homes.

And, the county is working with state and federal officials to set up a one-stop center to help Otis residents apply for aid and navigate the process to salvage, clean up and potentially rebuild.

On a bright, clear late summer Saturday, Highway 18 was filled with cars going to and from the coast. Fishermen were looking for fall Chinook in the Salmon River. Shops in nearby Lincoln City were filled with tourists.

But just out of sight, down a rural residential road, dozens of Otis residents were sifting through the ashes of their properties, and trying to figure out what to do next.

“It’s odd to be driving along and everything looks so normal,” Knight said. “And then you turn the corner …”


This video was taken Saturday, Sept. 19, 2020

Quinton Smith Nothing remains of a neighborhood of manufactured homes along North Yodel Lane in Otis after the Echo Mountain fire burned through it Sept. 9.

 

Quinton Smith The Echo Mountain fire left only charred metal in its wake when it raced through parts of Otis on Wednesday, Sept. 9.

 

 

Quinton Smith Large fir trees on North Yodel Lane at Trotter’s Path in Otis survived the Sept. 9 inferno but homes and automobiles did not.

 

 

Quinton Smith Crews from Pacific Power were kept out of the restricted areas between 9 a.m. and 3 p.m. Saturday while homeowners came in to inspect their property.

 

Quinton Smith Homeowners on North Yodel Lane in Otis inspect their burned property Saturday. The Echo Mountain fire burned rapidly from northeast to southwest, doing much of its damage along Yodel Lane.

 

Quinton Smith The Echo Mountain fire that raced through Otis last week destroyed 293 homes, including this one on North Yodel Lane, but left neighboring properties untouched.

 

Quinton Smith Structural assessment teams marked each property they checked in the Salmon River Mobile Village off Oregon Highway 18. Twenty-nine of the subdivision’s 31 homes were destroyed.

 

Quinton Smith A hand-made sign in front of a burned home instructs the property owner to register a claim with the Federal Emergency Management Agency.

 

Quinton Smith A cast iron tea pot survived the Echo Mountain fire in Otis, but is splashed with melted aluminum.

 

A homeowner’s lightly-burned sign on Northeast Highland Road thanks the nearly 600 firefighters and first responders who fought the Echo Mountain fire.

 

 

 

 

 

 

1 Comment Leave a Reply

  1. More information on what can be done that will really help the people in the area, not just feel good stuff because I am NOT donating to Red Cross

Comments are closed.

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