With wildfire danger up, hunters, campers should forego outdoor burning

Fast facts:

  • Report Arkansas wildfires at 1-800-468-8834
  • State Agriculture Department suppressed more than 100 fires in October

LITTLE ROCK — With most of Arkansas at high risk of wildfires, state officials are asking the public to avoid outdoor burning.

Arkansas burn ban map
AT RISK — As of Oct. 17, 2024, more than 80 percent of Arkansas is at high risk of wildfires. County judges have declared burn bans in more than two-thirds of the state’s 75 counties. (Image courtesy Arkansas Dept. of Agriculture.)

On Thursday, the Arkansas wildfire map showed 64 counties at high risk, with 11 counties, all in northeastern Arkansas, at moderate risk. County judges have imposed burn bans in most of the high-risk counties.

According to the U.S. Drought Monitor’s Oct 17 map, almost two-thirds of the state’s 75 counties are experiencing moderate to extreme drought. The most intense drought is in five northwest Arkansas counties.

“This weekend kicks off the traditional gun deer season across Arkansas and many people will be traveling to deer camp,”  Jaret Rushing, extension forestry instructor for the University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture, said Wednesday. “Deer camp usually consists of campfires, so it’s important that people keep in mind the danger.”

Among the outdoor burning activities to avoid include:

  • Burning trash
  • Open flame grilling
  • Prescribed burns
  • Campfires.

Sparks from lawn mower blades, trailer safety chains, hot exhaust pipes and driving on a flat tire can also start a wildfire.

The Arkansas Department of Agriculture, which oversees protection of more than 15 million acres of forestland in Arkansas, said that since Oct. 1, it has suppressed more than 100 wildfires on 1,116 acres. Since the beginning of the year, more than 700 wildfires have burned 15,000 acres in Arkansas.

The department urged anyone involved in outdoor activities to carry water and extinguish sparks from muzzleloader guns or machinery.

Jacob Hackman, extension forestry specialist for the Division of Agriculture, said starting a fire could be expensive.

“You may be liable for damages caused by an escaped forest fire,” he said.