• Okanogan Complex – . Three fires in the lower
Methow River valley, on either side of
State Route 153 in
Okanogan County. • Wenatchee Complex – . The largest fires were south of
U.S. Route 2 near the city of
Wenatchee mainly in
Chelan County. Other fires in the complex were in the upper
Entiat and
Wenatchee River drainages. • Byrd Fire – • Canyon Fire – . Located less than a mile west of the city of Wenatchee in Number 1 and Number 2 canyons. • Cashmere Fire – . Located south of
Icicle Creek extending into the
Alpine Lakes Wilderness. • Peavine Canyon Fire – . The Peavine Canyon Fire grew to become contiguous with the Table Mountain Fire to the south. • Poison Canyon Fire – • Table Mountain Fire – . Located east of U.S. Route 97 near
Blewett Pass in Kittitas County, the Table Mountain Fire threatened homes and historic structures near
Liberty, Washington. The fire grew to become contiguous with the Peavine Canyon Fire to the north. • Yakima Complex – . Approximately 75 small fires in Kittitas and
Yakima counties. The Wild Rose Fire was the largest and is located north of
U.S. Route 12 and east of
Rimrock Lake. • Cascade Creek Fire – . Located on the south and west slopes of
Mount Adams in the
Gifford Pinchot National Forest, including part of the
Mount Adams Wilderness.
Skamania and Yakima counties. ==Other fires==