
Visitors to Yellowstone National Park, which has escaped a major wildfire so far this summer despite hundreds of lightning strikes, will have to be even more careful with fire under new restrictions taking effect Tuesday due to "very high" fire conditions.
Backcountry travelers will have to get by without wood-burning campfires and rely on "stoves and lanterns that use pressurized liquid, jellied petroleum, or gas fuel, and fully enclosed, sheep-herder type stoves with a ¼-inch spark-arrestor screen in areas which are barren or cleared of all overhead and surrounding flammable materials within 3 feet of the device."
Those in the front country will be able to have campfires in established fire rings in the Madison, Mammoth, Slough Creek, Tower Fall, Canyon, Indian Creek, Lewis Lake, Grant Village and Bridge Bay campgrounds, but those fires must be attended and once out any charcoal and ash must be soaked, stirred, extinguished, and cold to the touch prior to leaving a campfire unattended.
Self-contained gas and charcoal grills will be allowed, fin the front country, as will "stoves and lanterns that use pressurized liquid, jellied petroleum, or gas fuel, and fully enclosed, sheep-herder type stoves with a ¼-inch spark-arrestor screen in areas which are barren or cleared of all overhead and surrounding flammable materials within 3 feet of the device."
Like to smoke? In the front country you can do that, but you must do so in an enclosed vehicle, single-family dwelling, developed campground, day-use picnic area, or within a 3-foot diameter area that is barren or cleared of all flammable material. In the backcountry you can smoke "only in areas adjacent to the provided fire ring in designated campsites or within a 3-foot-diameter area barren of all flammable material."
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