Skip to content

Border Blogs & News

Blogs and news from the borders of America.

Menu
  • Home
  • El Paso News
Menu

KTSM News – Trout Fire north of Silver City now 100% contained

Posted on August 1, 2025

EL PASO, Texas (KTSM) — The Trout Fire, which burned more than 47,000 acres this summer, was 100 percent contained as of July 24, officials with the Gila National Forest said.

The Trout Fire was located 12 miles north of Silver City.

The Gila National Forest also reported that it has had zero fires caused by humans during the past two months.

The area around the Trout Fire remains hazardous, the Gila National forest said.

“The public should be aware of hazards that exist within the burned area, including stump holes and loosened soil, rolling rocks, logs, and other debris, fire-weakened trees, and roads or trails that may be impassable due to fallen trees or flood impacts. There is potential for flash flooding within the burned area, especially where soil and vegetation burned at higher intensity. The forest road crew will be working on area roads over the next couple of weeks,” the news release said.

Heavy lightning activity is resulting in multiple new wildfires daily on the Gila National Forest, officials said. Many are being immediately suppressed by fire crews.

With the large number of fire incidents and limited responding resources, fires are prioritized based on life and property values at risk. All are full suppression fires.

Here is a run-down as provided by the Gila National Forest.

Black Range Ranger District

  • The Pitchfork Fire (1 acre) is located in the Houghton Canyon area north of Beaverhead. Crews are responding to size up the fire and initiate containment efforts.

Glenwood Ranger District

  • The Ridge Fire (0.10 acre) reported July 19 is located in steep, inaccessible terrain approximately 6 miles east of the Town of Mogollon.
  • The Canyon Fire (5 acres) reported July 30 is located south of Little Turkey Creek in the Gila Wilderness. Crews are responding to size up the fire and initiate containment efforts.

Quemado Ranger District

  • The Killion Fire (0.10 acre) was reported July 23 north of Mangas Mountain. The single snag fire has low potential for spread.

Wilderness Ranger District

  • Turkeyfeather Fire (24,128 acres) showed increased activity recently observed along its western perimeter in the Gila Wilderness. The fire has received precipitation and crews are assessing and validating control features to ensure the fire does not threaten values at risk in the Willow Creek area.
  • Firefighters on Goose Fire (3,692 acres) are mopping up residual heat and repairing impacts from suppression activities. Crews are preparing to pull out several large pieces of heavy equipment this weekend, which may result in short-term closure of New Mexico Highway 15. When that occurs, closure will be coordinated with New Mexico Department of Transportation. An area closure for the Goose Fire remains in effect.
  • The Granny Fire (10 acres) of July 11, Pinnacle Fire (5 acres) of July 13, Packsaddle Fire (0.50 acre) of July 20, Sycamore Fire (2 acres) of July 20, and Spring Fire (0.10 acre) of July 28 are all located in remote, inaccessible areas of the Gila Wilderness where they do not threaten life or property. They have shown no movement or growth.

Over the past two weeks, these fires were declared contained:

  • Buck (57,753 acres, reported 6/11/25)
  • Trout (47,294 acres, 6/12/25)
  • Cow (9.2 acres, 7/14/25)
  • Cowboy (1 acre, 7/29/25)
  • Fuego (0.10 acre, 7/30/25)
  • Lilly (0.10 acre, 7/30/25)
  • Little (0.10 acre, 7/30/25)

In that same period these fires were declared out:

  • Yam (0.10 acres, 7/19/25)
  • Wolf (0.10 acre, 7/19/25)
  • Bear (0.25 acre, 7/24/25)
  • Lefthand (2.5 acre, 7/25/25)
  • Hoague (0.10 acre, 7/30/25)
  • Cienega (0.10 acre, 7/30/25)
  • School (0.10 acre, 7/30/25)
  • Keko (0.10 acre, 7/30/25)
  • Fork (0.10 acre, 7/30/25)

These fires were declared controlled:

  • Panther (80 acres, 7/2/25)
  • Skeleton (1.25 acre, 7/29/25)

The forest has received 49% of its 30-year average annual precipitation in 2025 so far, and about 65% of the 30-year average for July. In addition to local firefighting resources, the Gila National Forest is hosting a rappel crew from Idaho, five contract engines, two state engines, two hotshot crews and one state initial attack crew. A Type 1 Blackhawk helicopter, and a local type 3 helicopter are available.

While there were 34 new wildfires in the past week due to lightning, the Gila National Forest has had no wildfires started by human causes in the past two months.

Visitors are encouraged to maintain this positive streak. Visitors are urged to extinguish all campfires before leaving them by dousing with plenty of water, stirring water into the coals, and feeling for heat with the back of the hand.

 Read: Read More 

Recent Posts

  • Tech Crunch – Anthropic cuts off OpenAI’s access to its Claude models
  • KTSM News – Texas House committee advances congressional redistricting plan
  • Tech Crunch – What founders should think about if looking to raise a Series C
  • Texas Monthly – Where Is Arlen From ‘King of the Hill’? In Texas, It’s Everywhere.
  • Texas Monthly – The Daily Crossword: August 2, 2025

El Paso News

El Paso News delivers independent news and analysis about politics and public policy in El Paso, Texas. Go to El Paso News

Politico Campaigns

Are you a candidate running for office? Politico Campaigns is the go-to for all your campaign branding and technology needs.

Go to Politico Campaigns

Custom Digital Art

My name is Martín Paredes and I create custom, Latino-centric digital art. If you need custom artwork for your marketing, I'm the person to call. Check out my portfolio

© Martín Paredes