Photo: #Canoeists paddle through the narrows between Lake Four and Lake Three, looking south at the fire and the smoke on Sunday, Sept. 11, 2011. "It really grew during the course of the day," said Greg Seitz, communications director for the Friends of the Boundary Waters Wilderness.
Photo: #An aerial view of the Pagami Creek area in the Boundary Waters Canoe Area.
Photo: #The Pagami Creek fire in northeastern Minnesota, as seen from Moose Lake northwest of Ely, Minn. on Monday, Sept. 12, 2011.
Photo: #The Pagami Creek Fire continues to burn across the Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness Tuesday afternoon about 10 miles north of Isabella, Minn.
Photo: #The northern Minnesota fire grew rapidly in the last 24 hours - from 11,000 acres to more than 60,000 acres by midday Tuesday. Authorities now estimate that the wildfire in northern Minnesota has engulfed about 100,000 acres.
Photo: #A Department of Natural Resources firefighting plane floats in Snowbank Lake. About 300 firefighters are working to contain the wildfire in the Boundary Waters Canoeing Area wilderness.
Photo: #Numerous snow and rain showers moved through the Isabella, Minn. area Wednesday afternoon just miles from the Pagami Creek Fire. Here, snow showers fall on an empty baseball field adjacent to the Isabella Community Center in Isabella, Minn. Wet conditions prevented the fire from spreading greatly on Wednesday.
Photo: #After several days of favorable weather, Friday brought less favorable conditions. A U.S. Forest Service official had predicted a "more active fire day" in the Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness, where officials once said the blaze had consumed more than 160 square miles, or more than 100,000 acres.

Forest Service releases report on Pagami fire management

by Dan Kraker, Minnesota Public Radio

Duluth, Minn. — The Superior National Forest has released the first of several reports assessing its management of the Pagami Creek Fire, which burned nearly 150 square-miles in and near the Boundary Waters this past summer.

The initial report analyzes an incident in mid-October where three firefighters swamped a motorized canoe in frigid water. Two were treated for hypothermia.

The wildfire was an incredibly complex incident and the findings will be used in future safety briefings, Superior National Forest spokeswoman Kris Reichenbach said.

"There's a lot of opportunities from different angles to learn and apply what we learned to future events, not just here but across the country," Reichenbach said.

Over the next month, the Forest Service will release further reports analyzing the agency's management of the fire, including its controversial decision to not immediately extinguish the blaze when it began in August. High winds later fanned the inferno to nearly 150 square miles.