When a downed power line sparked a wildfire in the dry forest near the northeastern Minnesota town of Ely, firefighters were ready to hit it fast and hard.

The fire was reported at 1:40 p.m. Thursday, about 10 minutes after it started. The first engine pulled up three minutes later, just as a spotter plane arrived overhead. The first responders called for a big Skycrane helicopter 10 minutes later, and it started dropping water onto the blaze at 2:01 p.m. The first water-scooping tanker planes arrived just over an hour later.

The quick response was crucial in stopping the fire just a few hundred yards from homes on the south side of Ely, a community of about 3,500 people that's a primary outfitting and entry point for the Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness. Thousands of visitors a year flock to its North American Bear Center and its International Wolf Center.

Officials said Friday they were able to attack the fire so fast and save the town because they were prepared for it — they had people, fire trucks and aircraft nearby and on alert.

Luck also played a role, though. The fire started right alongside Highway 1 and followed it north toward the city. That made it easier to rush fire trucks and crews from several local volunteer fire departments to the scene. The Skycrane, which sucks up water through a long "snorkel," happened to be standing by at the Ely airport.

Firefighters spent Friday mopping up hot spots still smoldering in the 216 acres blackened by the fire. Authorities said the danger wasn't over because of dry conditions and high winds blowing north toward Ely. But no injuries were reported, and the fire burned only three outbuildings — a workshop, a storage shed and a hunting shack. Seven homes in the woods south of town remained under an evacuation order.

Crews have the wildlife 60 percent contained, fire information officer Jean Bergerson said Friday evening.

"We're feeling fairly good about our control lines," Bergerson said. She said 200 firefighters were on the scene earlier Friday, and some crews have switched from heavy bulldozers to light track vehicles that are more maneuverable.

But Bergerson said another "bad fire day" of hot and windy weather is forecast Saturday. Rain isn't expected until late afternoon, and storms could bring lightning that could ignite fires, she said.

Officials laid important groundwork for fighting the Ely fire — and some much bigger recent forest fires — several years ago when they chose strategic sites for basing firefighting aircraft, said Sheldon Mack, wildfire aviation supervisor for the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources. Ely is one of the primary bases, as are Hibbing, Brainerd and Bemidji. But officials also move aircraft around the state to deal with potential threats, he said.

The fire danger in the Ely area was high Thursday, and even higher in northwestern Minnesota. So when air attack supervisor Bob Perleberg got the call at the Bemidji airport, he was prepared. His guidelines call for launching within 15 minutes, but he said he was in the air in his twin-engine Queen Air in about 10. Two CL-215 tanker planes also were standing by there.

View Comments

Pilot Jason Robinson said he was sitting in one reading a book when the call came in, so he just started his engines.

"It's what we do. It's what we train for. It's our profession," Perleberg said. "We realize the faster you can get off of the ground, the faster you can get over the fire."

Even five minutes can be critical in a wildfire, he said. A fire in the underbrush can become a full-blown blaze in the treetops that quickly, he said, and then it's very difficult to stop.

"It means winning or losing. It's very difficult to drag one of these things back in the box once it's out," Perleberg said.

Looking for comments?
Find comments in their new home! Click the buttons at the top or within the article to view them — or use the button below for quick access.