The Kettle River range has a documented history of large wildfires over the past century. Colville National Forest records attribute the smaller fire seasons in the early 1900s to wet summer conditions preventing larger conflagrations, and larger fire seasons such 1910, 1914, and 1920, to dry conditions. 1929 saw abnormally dry conditions across the region, the daily high winds blowing from the south exacerbating the 6% to 10% ambient humidity. The fire was finally extinguished in late fall of 1929. and spread northeast across the ridge line towards the Boulder Creek watershed. By July 31 the lower areas of the watershed and the road were in the fire zone. Burning continued along a small area of the highway on August 1 but mostly spread southeast across the mass of Tenasket Mountain. On August 3 the fire flared and spread across the highway again before containment. A small but persistent fire broke out at the summit near Marble Lookout in early October 1970. The fire was the result of winds whipping flames out of a slash pile burn on October 3 and spreading overnight to about . A crew of 200 firefighters built of fire-line containment and several
aircraft dropped fire retardants on the fire. In 2015, the
Kettle Complex Stickpin Fire started by a lightning strike in the
Profanity Peak roadless area south of the Boulder Creek road on August 11. It grew and moved north across the pass area and into areas of recovered Aeneas Creek and Dollar Mountain fire burn. Boulder Creek Pass was closed to though traffic at both Curlew and Highway 395, with traffic being routed south to Sherman Pass. The fire stalled out due to loss of fuels when it burned to the perimeter of the 2003 Togo fire. The 2015 Ferry County, Washington Community Wildfire Protection Plan (CWPP) outlines the fire response organizations who oversee the Boulder Creek Road. The western stretch from Curlew to just before the summit region is within Ferry County Fire District 13 jurisdiction, with some land tracts in the surrounding watersheds placed under
Washington State Department of Natural Resources oversight. The remaining highway is almost all Colville National Forest responsibility, with only the very eastern few miles covered by Ferry county Fire District 3. Boulder Creek is a designated alternate evacuation route from Curlew and the region in cases of wild fires. ==References==