Great Lakes Fire update and community meeting reminder — tonight

Operations Section Chief Shawn Nagle of the Southern Area Interagency Red Incident Management Team provides this morning's update on the Great Lakes Fire.
Operations Section Chief Shawn Nagle of the Southern Area Interagency Red Incident Management Team provides this morning’s update on the Great Lakes Fire.

Craven County government and the Great Lakes Fire command team provided the latest information about the wildfire in the Croatan National Forest:

Craven County press release:

All Craven County residents are invited to attend a Community Meeting tonight from 6:00 p.m. to 7:00 p.m. hosted by the Great Lakes Fire Management Team at Creekside Elementary School, 2790 Landscape Drive in New Bern.  Fire-related operations experts will present information on topics such as:

– Current status of the Great Lakes Fire wildfire,

– History of the Great Lakes Fire wildfire,

– Firefighting efforts and containment strategies to stop the growth of the wildfire,

– Wildfire behavior and what impacts it,

– Wildfire location, and more.

Citizens will have an opportunity to ask questions, to review maps of the fire area and to talk with members of the Great Lakes Fire Incident Management Team.

Can’t make it in person tonight? View the meeting live on Facebook at: fb.me/e/5RLxG0dUj. A recording of the event will also be made available at a later date.

The operations of this team and the resources they have brought in to fight this wildfire are impressive. This will be a great opportunity for citizens to learn about the Great Lakes Fire that started last week, what is being done to contain it and how current operations will improve wildfire containment in this area in the future. This is also an opportunity for us to give a big Craven County thank you to the team and their personnel for all they are doing.

By Amber Parker


Great Lakes fire unified command team’s Operations Section Chief Shawn Nagel provided today’s morning update:

The team encouraged community involvement in tonight’s meeting and provided the following press release:

We have had many offers of donations to firefighters. We are grateful for your support, but currently do not have the capacity for processing and storing donations on site. In lieu of donations to the Great Lakes Fire please consider making a monetary donation to the Wildland Firefighter Foundation.

Great Lakes Fire: The Great Lakes Fire, located within Croatan National Forest, one mile South-Southeast of New Bern, started on April 19. The fire is suspected to be human-caused and is still under investigation. It is burning in pocosin swamp and mixed fuels within and around the footprint of the 2012 Dad Fire, which burned roughly 21,331 acres. Previous prescribed burning by the U. S. Forest Service helped slow fire spread by reducing the amount of burnable vegetation. No structures have been lost and none are currently threatened.

Acreage: 32,400 acres Containment: 30%

Personnel and Equipment: 206 total personnel; 4 Helicopters, 16 Type-6 Engines, 19 Type-2 Tractor Plow Units, 1 Fixed Wing Aircraft, 2 tracked vehicles, and 2 Ambulances.

Today: Firefighters continue to construct new primary and secondary contingency lines to increase protection on the north end and help protect surrounding communities. They are also reinforcing firelines west and south of the fire to protect forested areas and Weyerhaeuser timberlands. Firefighters continue to flood areas in the southeast of the fire to saturate organic soils where the fire is burning deep into the ground. They are raising the water level in canals by blocking culverts to do this. The eastern side of the wildfire has shown little smoke during reconnaissance flights, so is in monitoring status. We are using drones to detect heat with infrared cameras. We continue to work closely with the National Weather Service and cooperating agencies. Operational resources include personnel from the U.S. Forest Service, N.C. Forest Service, and Weyerhaeuser Corporation. Initial attack firefighters assigned to the incident are on standby and are ready to respond to new fire starts on and around the Great Lakes Fire.

Natural resource experts are on scene to provide advice and make sure that suppression efforts do not destroy the beautiful natural resources on the Croatan National Forest. They evaluate plowed firelines in advance to reduce damage to wildlife and endangered plants. The advisors also work with air operations separating helicopter dip sites to reduce the spread of alligator weed from one part of the fire to another. They also have a plan to clean equipment to reduce the spread of noxious plants from one area to another.

Weather and Fire Behavior: Rainfall varied tremendously overnight with the south end receiving only .06” while the north end received .67”. This is still not enough to extinguish the fire. Relative humidity is predicted at 65-70% with light winds out of the east. Expect clearing and drying through the afternoon although an isolated shower cannot be ruled out. A strong low-pressure system will impact the area Friday bringing periods of showers and thunderstorms. Some storms could bring gusty winds and hail. Another strong front is expected to impact the area on Sunday. Fire behavior is not expected to change due to the weather.

Air quality: Information on current air quality data for North Carolina is at airnow.gov.

Closures: Road closures on County Line Road and Catfish Lake Road remain in effect. Updates to road closures surrounding the fire is at https://drivenc.gov/.

Temporary Flight Restriction: A Temporary Flight Restriction (TFR) remains in place over the fire area; information is at Federal Aviation Administration website. This is necessary to protect aerial operations. If there are intrusions into the Temporary Flight Restrictions, we must stop aerial operations.

Great Lakes Fire Information

Phone: 252-285-6174

Inciweb: Ncncf Great Lakes Information | InciWeb (nwcg.gov)

Facebook: U.S. Forest Service – National Forests in North Carolina