Lee fire becomes 6th largest wildfire in Colorado history
The southeast portion of the Lee Fire is becoming more active near County Rd 60 and Highway 13 as the afternoon red flag warning weather patterns continue.
The Lee fire southwest of Meeker, Colorado in Rio Blanco County has become the sixth largest wildfire in Colorado history, eclipsing the 2012 High Park fire, which burned 87,284 acres west of Fort Collins.
The fire grew from over 88,000 acres to over 92,000 acres throughout the day on Saturday, with no containment, state fire officials said.
By Sunday morning, the fire had burned 106,672 acres, however, some progress had been made and the fire was at 6% containment, according to state fire officials and federal fire maps.
Mandatory evacuation orders have been issued for Zones 20, 22, 25, 50, 51, 62, 63, 64 and 65, which are primarily south and west of Meeker.
Unfortunate weather conditions forecast for Sunday called for the fire to potentially grow as winds gusting to 20 mph were to blow from the north and northwest.
“Near-critical fire weather will return today,” the Rocky Mountain Incident Management Team said in a Sunday update. “This will include low relative humidity, periods of gusty winds from the north/northwest and lack of cloud coverage. The very dry fuels with the expected weather could result in extreme fire behavior in some areas of the Lee Fire.”
The Lee fire jumped over Colorado Highway 13 and is now burning on the east side of the highway in the northeastern corner of the burn area; the closest to Meeker the fire has been since ignition last week.
However, state fire officials said that area is within the “contained fire edge.”
The Elk fire east of Meeker has burned 14,635 acres, having grown only 133 acres since Saturday morning, and was 9% contained, up slightly from its 14,502 around 10 a.m. on Saturday, according to state officials.
Over 1,000 people are now involved in the efforts to fight both fires, according to state fire officials.
The top six wildfires in Colorado history, when adding the Lee fire, all recorded over 100,000 acres burned during the fire’s span, with the Cameron Peak fire (2020) being the only fire to burn more than 200,000 acres, according to the Colorado Division of Fire Prevention & Control.
Other notable Colorado wildfire facts are as follows:
- 20 of 20 largest wildfires have occurred in the last 20 years (since 2001).
- 16 of the top 20 largest wildfires have occurred in the last 13 years (since 2008).
- 15 of top 20 largest wildfires have occurred in the last 9 years (since 2012).
- 11 of top 20 largest wildfires have occurred in the last 5 years (since 2016).
- 9 of top 20 largest wildfires have occurred in the last 3 years (2018 and 2020).
- 4 of top 5 largest wildfires have occurred in the last 3 years (2018 and 2020).
For information about evacuation notices, visit facebook.com/rioblancocountysheriffsoffice or the National Interagency Fire Center’s website.
(Contact Denver Gazette Digital Strategist Jonathan Ingraham at jonathan.ingraham@denvergazette.com or on X at @Skingraham.)




