Jack Walker Published

Brushfire Burns 100 Acres Atop Morgan County Mountain, Has Been Contained

Smoke rises from a mountaintop covered in leafless trees. The sky is blue overhead.
Smoke rises in the Cacapon Mountain region in this photograph shared to Facebook on Sunday, Dec. 8. A wildfire atop the mountain has since been contained, local officials say.
Emily.Roxberry.5/Facebook
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Over the weekend, local officials say a brushfire burned more than 100 acres of wilderness atop the Morgan County region of Cacapon Mountain, near the rural community of Great Cacapon.

The fire was still burning as of early Monday afternoon, but has since been “completely contained” by emergency response teams, according to Morgan County Emergency Communications Director Marshall Younker.

Younker said Morgan County emergency responders called in support outside the county to help reduce the burning.

“There were multiple agencies from around the area, both from inside West Virginia and outside West Virginia,” he said.

Local response teams have not yet identified the cause of the fire, which was first identified in the “late morning, early afternoon” on Saturday, Younker said. No injuries or structural damages were reported.

On Sunday, flames “got fairly close to one house,” so emergency response teams staged a “structural protection” apparatus around it, Younker said. Ultimately, it did not come into use.

“There was never an immediate danger to the house,” he said.

On a dim evening, flames burning on top of a mountain are visible behind bare trees stretching across the foreground.
Fire was visible atop Cacapon Mountain, documented in this photo shared online Dec. 8.

Photo Credit: Elizabeth O’Meally/Facebook
On a dim evening, flames burning atop a wooded mountain slope toward a home in the foreground, though they are not in the immediate vicinity of the property.
Flames approach a home in the rural Cacapon Mountain region.

Photo Credit: J.B. Bailey/Facebook

According to Younker, small-scale brushfires are not unusual for the area during drier times of year.

“The fire was a little bigger than what we normally deal with, but brushfires this time of year are fairly common,” he said.

From Oct. 1 to Dec. 31, West Virginia tightens burning regulations because drier fall weather can contribute to the spread of man-made wildfires, according to the West Virginia Division of Forestry.

During these months, and another restricted burning period in the spring, outdoor burning is allowed only from 5 p.m. to 7 a.m. Burning during daytime hours is prohibited, and all fires must be contained by a ring or a safety strip.

Violating state burning policies during fall and spring months can result in fines from $100 to $1,000.

This fall, the state enacted a temporary ban on outdoor burning due to low water levels and dry weather. These conditions can contribute to the spread of wildfires, according to a November press release from the office of Gov. Jim Justice.

Despite the ban, fires stretched across several regions of West Virginia last month, burning through thousands of acres of land.

For a full list of outdoor burning regulations, visit the West Virginia Division of Forestry website.