The Doe Canyon fire began in Dolores, Colorado on June 27, 2026, and has burned 1,046 acres with no containment as of the last update. Homes in the affected area face direct fire damage risk while the fire remains active.
Overview written from official NASA EONET and National Interagency Fire Center/IRWIN data.
- Type
- Wildfires
- Official size
- 1,046 acres
- Containment
- 0%
- Cause
- Undetermined
- Began
- Status
- Ongoing
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Affected areas & guides
Every area named for this event, per the official source. Open yours for damage guides — what to do first, and how to reach a vetted restoration pro, 24/7.
Dolores, Colorado
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Affected area map
The shaded area is the affected-area perimeter reported for this event by NASA EONET (Dolores, Colorado), colored by its significance. Pan and zoom to explore the map; when more than one observation exists, use the slider below to step through how the reported area changed.
Official size & containment
Official incident size and containment reported through NIFC / IRWIN, as we observed it. Newest first.
- 1,046 acres ±0 0% contained
- 1,046 acres ±0 0% contained
- 1,046 acres ±0 0% contained
- 1,046 acres ±0 0% contained
- 1,046 acres ±0 0% contained
- 1,046 acres ±0 0% contained
- 1,046 acres 0% contained
Shown as reported by our sources — not an official product. For current advisories and the authoritative map, see NASA EONET ↗.
Latest updates
Official updates and news coverage for this event, newest first — National Weather Service products, local storm reports, incident updates and press headlines. Official items are verbatim government text; news headlines link out to the original outlet.
- Forecast discussion NWS GJT
Area Forecast Discussion
Triple-digit heat continues through Wednesday, with afternoon thunderstorms increasing and flash flood risk rising by mid-to-late week.
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000 FXUS65 KGJT 140547 AFDGJT
Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Grand Junction CO 1147 PM MDT Mon Jul 13 2026
.KEY MESSAGES...
- Near-record heat continues Tuesday for western Colorado and eastern Utah.
- Daytime highs for the lower elevations will remain in the triple digits through at least Wednesday.
- Terrain based showers and thunderstorms increase in coverage each afternoon, with a threat for flash flooding becoming more likely by mid to late week.
&&
.DISCUSSION... Issued at 1103 PM MDT Mon Jul 13 2026
Some decent precipitation fell today over the southern half of the area with QPF reports around 0.3 to 0.8 inches at some sensors across southeast Utah and southwest Colorado with some of the storms today, with some locally higher amounts in some areas. The high pressure center remains over Wyoming with our CWA in the easterly flow on the southern side of the circulation. This will continue to allow our moisture to increase and eventually spread further north and east as the high shifts a bit eastward by late this week. At this time, the axis of strongest moisture advection remains across Arizona into Nevada and western Utah. This axis trickles into the…
- News IQAir
Wildfire Map Spotlight: Snyder, Babylon, Ferris, and Gold Mountain Fires in Colorado and Utah
- News Denver7
Ferris Fire: Wildfire in Dolores, Montezuma counties tops 63,000 acres, reaches 19% containment
- News KOAT
Ferris Fire burns over 50,000 acres in southwestern Colorado
Show 4 earlier updates
- KSJD News
Officials explain why the Ferris Fire is difficult to fight in steep canyon terrain
- FEMA Federal declaration
Fire Management Assistance declaration: WILLOW FIRE (Colorado)
- FEMA Federal declaration
Fire Management Assistance declaration: GOLD MOUNTAIN FIRE (Colorado)
- CBS News News
Ferris, Far Draw Fires merge in southwest Colorado, evacuation notice issued for nearby residents
Updates are captured automatically from official and news sources, and may lag the live source. For the very latest, see NASA EONET ↗.