| WA’s wildfire future: More volatile forests amid slashed budgets 
 
  Jim Henterly, a National Park Service fire lookout, uses  binoculars  to keep an eye on the Perry fire from Desolation Peak on  Sept. 13 in  North Cascades National Park. (Nick Wagner / The Seattle  Times) 
 Oct. 12, 2025 at 6:00 am  Updated Oct. 12, 2025 at 6:00 am
 
 By
 Conrad Swanson
 Seattle Times climate reporter
 
 
   
 Climate Lab   is a Seattle Times initiative that explores the effects of climate   change in the Pacific Northwest and beyond. The project is funded in   part by The Bullitt Foundation, CO2 Foundation, Jim and Birte Falconer,   Mike and Becky Hughes, Henry M. Jackson Foundation, Martin-Fabert   Foundation, Craig McKibben and Sarah Merner, University of Washington   and Walker Family Foundation, and its fiscal sponsor is the Seattle   Foundation.
 
 
 DESOLATION PEAK — A warm glow of distant flames  pulsed in  the mid-September night above the western shores of Ross  Lake. You  almost have to squint to see it.
 
 Jim Henterly raised  his black  binoculars. Their lenses captured the light of the Perry fire  better  than the naked eye. He also kept close watch on a “sleeper”  fire to the  east, which was so small it hadn’t even earned an official  name. If the  fire grew, though, it could easily climb toward the  doorstep of his cozy  wooden lookout.
 
 Years ago, Henterly and his  wife joked that there  would be no point in working as a wildfire  lookout in Western  Washington. There just wouldn’t be any action.
 
 But that’s no longer the case. Our landscape and climate are changing, to be sure. So are we.
 
 
  The Perry fire glows orange as the sun sets Sept. 13 in North Cascades National Park. (Nick Wagner / The Seattle Times)
 
 From   dwindling mountain snowpack and desiccated blueberry patches to   disappearing critters, colleagues and resources. Henterly, 71, has not   only watched these changes unfold, he’s felt them. For decades,   this lone lookout has spent his summers in a sort of Thoreauvian dream,   hooked on the lifestyle, the camaraderie, the sense of purpose. For   even longer, people across the American West shared another dream, in   which they thought it possible to stave off the threat of wildfires   indefinitely. But both dreams must eventually end.
 
 The Seattle  Times sought out Henterly’s company on this peak,  alongside the insight  of public officials and wildfire experts, to  understand the scope of  our growing wildfire risk and to illuminate the  years ahead.
 
 
  Sources: Esri, National Interagency Fire Center (Chris Kaeser / The Seattle Times)
 
 High-profile  wildfires in recent years warn of future  blazes west of the Cascade  crest, where most of Washington’s people  live, fire ecologists say. And  while money and staffing for lookouts  have declined steadily over the  decades, this year the federal  government hastened its retreat on  virtually every other front.
 
 Washington  state, reeling from cuts  to bridge a $16 billion budget hole, must now  face much of the  increasing danger alone, and it can’t keep dodging  bullets forever.
 
 Danger looms year-round across many of the Western states now. Just look at the wildfires in California, Henterly said.
 
 “They’re endless,” he said. “And they’re everywhere at once.”
 
 
  Jim Henterly dials in an Osborne Fire Finder last month from his Desolation Peak lookout.  (Nick Wagner / The Seattle Times)
 
 
  A photo from 1984 shows Jim Henterly with his wife, Ann Marie, and  daughter Lael at the Mount Ireland fire lookout in Oregon’s Blue  Mountains. (Nick Wagner / The Seattle Times)
 
 
  The Desolation Peak fire lookout sits at 6,102 feet above sea level in  North Cascades National Park. (Nick Wagner / The Seattle Times) 
 
 He’s   seen his fair share from this perch 6,102 feet above sea level, plenty   of them close enough to belch their smoke straight into his face. This   summer, flames across Ross Lake were so widespread that the  mountainside  appeared to hold a small city, Henterly said. The Perry  fire has since  calmed, though smoldering trees and logs remain.
 
 For  the briefest  of moments, the small sleeper fire to the east flared. A  speck of flame  appeared on the slopes of Skagit Peak and flickered in  the breeze before  withdrawing once more into a charred tree.
 
 These things can sneak up on you if you’re not careful.
 
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 48.91° N, 121.02°
 
 WDesolation   Peak is perhaps the most famous wildfire lookout in the business,   having hosted the likes of Jack Kerouac and poet Gary Snyder. There’s a   certain mysticism to the remote mountaintop and its panoramic views of   the lake, Nohokomeen Glacier and the jagged Hozomeen Mountain.
 
 
     Hozomeen Mountain towers over the landscape. Also,  the Milky  Way appears over the Desolation Peak… (Nick Wagner / The  Seattle Times)
 
 
 Up top, hikers seeking an adventure  or spiritual experience will  find Henterly, a veteran lookout of more  than 30 summers, the last  decade of which have been spent on  Desolation. In the offseason, he  works as a firefighter and emergency  medical technician in rural Whatcom  County, where he lives. On top of  the mountain, he’s both of those  things, alongside a fire spotter, radio relay, guide, historian, philosopher and brand ambassador.
 
 Henterly   is soft-spoken and warm, harboring a sense of wonder for the natural   world. Eager to share the mountain’s lore or history of wildfires. From   his vantage point, he peers deeper into this world than most.
 
 Job   security’s always been a little touch and go, said Henterly, who is a   seasonal U.S. Forest Service worker. But federal funding is now at its   most precarious point in decades. He can’t yet say whether he’ll be   asked back for another year.
 
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 Less money
 
 Pessimism  is  seeping into every facet of the wildland firefighting industry,  which  struggles for money, staffing, data and other resources.
 
 The single largest challenge stems from Olympia, said Public Lands Commissioner Dave Upthegrove.
 
 In   an attempt to bridge the state’s $16 billion budget shortfall for the   next four years, lawmakers cut $125 million that had been promised per   biennium for wildfire response and preparedness.
 
 Those cuts  kick in next year and wildfire programs will have $40  million to spend,  two-thirds of their budget this year, Upthegrove said.  The year after,  they’ll have half as much.
 
 That will mean fewer  prescribed  burns, less forest thinning, less grant money for local  crews, who are  generally first on the scene for wildfires, Washington  state Forester  George Geissler said.
 
 The cost-saving measures  might not pan  out. Guarding against wildfires ahead of time will always  be more  affordable than fighting or recovering from them, Upthegrove  said. In  October, he noted that just two of the state’s largest  wildfires still  burning each cost about $1 million a day to fight.
 
 
  A stream is choked by charred remnants from the Labor Mountain fires near Cle Elum on Oct. 1. (Kevin Clark / The Seattle Times)
 
 As   global warming and drying trends deepen, wildfire danger reaches  deeper  into major urban areas, as the country saw in Los Angeles;  Lahaina,  Hawaii; and Louisville, Colo. Here in Washington, Upthegrove  said,  places like Snoqualmie, North Bend, Redmond and Issaquah worry  him in  particular.
 
 The overarching fire management effort, by  definition,  requires close coordination between state and federal  agencies, he  said, and President Donald Trump’s administration has been   uncommunicative and unpredictable.
 
 So far this year, the  federal  government has fired more than 3,400 from the Forest Service  and 1,000  from the Park Service. Some 4,500 firefighting jobs remained  unfilled at  the height of the season, ProPublica reported.
 
 Out  of next year’s budget, the Trump administration wants to slash  nearly  $1.4 billion of the Forest Service’s management, operations,   conservation and research allocations and $900 million from the National   Park Service. A proposal to absorb Forest Service firefighting   operations within the Department of Interior would eliminate $2.4   billion,   High Country News reported.
 
 An   Interior spokesperson said in an email that the administration is   working to streamline its hiring process and strengthen pay and   retention for wildland firefighters but offered few additional details.
 
 The   administration also continually attacks the broad scientific consensus   of global warming, itself a substantial factor in our worsening   wildfires, and has called for the elimination of the Federal Emergency   Management Agency.
 
 
  Fire burns through brush during prescribed-burn training in May 2 near Roslyn. (Nick Wagner / The Seattle Times)
 
 Put   together, said Timothy Ingalsbee, a wildland fire ecologist based in   Eugene, Ore., the Trump administration is dismantling the country’s   resources to guard against, fight and recover from wildfires at a time   when the risk is increasing. And it’s putting much more pressure on   states that aren’t financially capable of making up the difference.
 
 “We are running fast in the wrong direction,” Ingalsbee said.
 
 The   gap between science and contemporary fire management is huge and   growing, said Ingalsbee, who also heads the nonprofit Firefighters   United for Safety, Ethics and Ecology.
 
 Where are you, marmots?
 
 A   pair of ravens hopped and played in the breeze atop Desolation Peak as   Henterly watched from behind a pane of glass. He’s watched them for   years now, same as the bears foraging through the blueberry patches down   the mountain.
 
 Henterly wouldn’t call himself part of  the wildlife community on  this mountain. Rather, he’s an observer. And a  keen one, at that. He  knows when something’s missing, like the marmots.
 
 The   furry creatures disappeared over the past couple of years, driven away   by warming winters, rising tree lines and increased predation.
 
 Waving   a hand over the mountain panorama, Henterly will point out portions of   the forest ravaged by western spruce budworm, followed by beetle kill.
 
 Extreme   cold or wildfire are the best bets to kill the devastating insects en   masse, he said. And these days, it’s much more likely to be a wildfire,   which also thrives on the dead and dying foliage, he said.
 
 
  A black bear forages on wild blueberries Sept. 13 in North Cascades National Park. (Nick Wagner / The Seattle Times)
 
 More fires
 
 Washington   now sits on the tail end of its third year of severe drought in a row,   leaving densely packed trees and shrubs dry and primed for wildfire.
 
 Public   officials braced for the worst at the start of the summer but so far   their fears haven’t materialized. To date, wildfires across the state   have burned through some 392 square miles of forest (more than 4.5 times   the footprint of Seattle).
 
 This year’s burn area is well under  the 10-year average of 730 square  miles, said Ryan Rodruck, a  spokesperson for the state Department of  Natural Resources. But the number of fires is about 15% higher than the long-term average.
 
 Part of the reason for such a low burn area, Rodruck said, is that our firefighters are quite adept at extinguishing wildfires.
 
 Putting   out fires is only part of the equation, though, said Susan Prichard, a   wildfire ecologist with the University of Washington. Suppressing them   entirely only serves to delay the inevitable and allow fuels to   accumulate, increasing the risk for massive and devastating wildfires   where before only small ones would historically have burned.
 
 Fires   in the dense and wet forests of Western Washington are much less   common, Prichard said. But they hold much greater destructive   potential.
 
 
  The Bear Gulch fire has left burn scars in the forest on the north side of Lake Cushman. (Erika Schultz / The Seattle Times)
 
 One   harbinger of their increasing prevalence in Western Washington is the   human-caused Bear Gulch fire, Prichard said. It sparked on July 6 and   still burns today, the largest blaze west of the Cascades. To date, it   has consumed more than 32 square miles but hasn’t yet killed anybody or   destroyed any buildings.
 
 Had Bear Gulch combined with high-speed   winds, especially those that can intermittently come from the east,  its  potential to spread far and wide would have multiplied, Prichard  said.  The recipe reminded her of the 2020 Labor Day fires in Oregon,  which  killed 11 and destroyed more than 4,000 homes.
 
 In many ways, Western Washington lucked out, she said.
 
 As  the  number of fire ignitions continues to rise, each new fire  represents a  roll of the dice, said Michael Medler, a former wildland  firefighter and  pyrogeography researcher at Western Washington  University. Chances of a  major fire in Western Washington might be low  in a given year but  they’re growing.
 
 
  Crew   members work in late August to improve access for firefighters during   the Bear Gulch fire near the north side of Lake Cushman. (Erika Schultz  /  The Seattle Times)
 
 The  paradigm brings to mind Hurricane  Katrina, Medler said. In the  aftermath, then-President George W. Bush  claimed that nobody anticipated  New Orleans’ levees breaching in the  storm surge.
 
 Sure they did, Medler said. Anybody who thought about it for an hour anticipated the breach.
 
 “That’s   where we’re at. Who could anticipate a $5 billion west-side Cascades   fire? Everyone who’s thought about it,” said Medler, referencing the   potential cost of damages from such a blaze.
 
 Outlook from up topHenterly’s under no illusions about the current state of affairs. Plenty of time to consider the angles on his mountain peak.
 
 He   spends much of his time in isolation, surrounded by books and   collecting quotes mentioning “desolation.” He’ll pin them up around his   14-by-14 home, alongside portraits he’s drawn of Henry David Thoreau,   Emily Dickinson, Herman Melville, John Muir and Treebeard. He also has a   special affinity for the ill-fated explorer Ernest Shackleton.
 
 
  A   daily log, books and more tidbits belonging to Jim Henterly sit on a   desk inside the Desolation Peak lookout in North Cascades National Park.   (Nick Wagner / The Seattle Times)
 
 Some  of the sketches he’s  turned into stickers and he’ll thrust a handful in  your direction,  keepsakes for later. He’ll draw in the margins of a  guest book he  keeps, encouraging visitors to leave notes of their own.  He’s kind and  energetic, eager to share a laugh and taking comfort in  the sporadic  company of hikers and seekers.
 
 No, Henterly  doesn’t  project an air of pessimism, nor would he want anyone to leave  the  mountain in despair. Not all news is bad news. Nor is every fire   something to fear.
 
 Good fire
 
 For  one example  of good fire, just look west across Ross Lake toward the  smoldering  Perry fire. Through the tail end of summer, the burn area  remained  relatively small, crossing paths with previous burn scars on  the  landscape. It was sparked by lightning rather than by humans, who  are  responsible for an estimated 90% of wildfires.
 
 
  Smoke   from the Perry fire billows out of a valley as seen from Desolation   Peak on Sept. 14 in North Cascades National Park. (Nick Wagner / The   Seattle Times)
 
 Park  officials are comfortable allowing this  particular fire to progress  (mostly) organically, still moving to  protect buildings and  infrastructure in the area, Henterly said.
 
 North  Cascades National  Park has served as a leader in this space by —  whenever practical —  allowing wildfires to resume their restorative  ecological role, Prichard  said. The Sourdough fire in 2023 might be  another example of a healthy  wildfire in the park, she said, though  officials did struggle to protect  Seattle City Light’s electrical  infrastructure in the area.
 
 Once a  wildfire burns through an  area, it provides a sort of reset, Prichard  said. Fires have been a  regular part of the region’s ecosystem for  millennia, whether lighted  naturally or by Indigenous people. Return  fires are less likely to burn  with such intensity because there’s less  fuel.
 
 This is not to  say every wildfire should be left to burn as it will  but, wherever  possible, the big picture should be considered, Prichard  said.
 
 Every fire’s unique, Henterly said, and each can teach a different lesson.
 
 Even   after spats of rain showered over the North Cascades, he continued to   glance toward his sleeper fire every so often, just to make sure it   wasn’t gaining ground.
 
 People have been forecasting the end of   Henterly’s career for decades. One fire management officer in the 1980s   warned that human lookouts would soon be replaced by technology.
 
 
  Jim   Henterly keeps an eye on the Perry fire from the Desolation Peak fire   lookout in North Cascades National Park. (Nick Wagner / The Seattle   Times)
 
 Recalling the story, Henterly cast a wry look skyward, thinking of his former supervisor.
 
 “I’m still here, Jerry,” he said.
 
 Henterly’s   not giving up, and he wouldn’t want you to either. We humans have a   pretty good gig going here on Earth, he said. It won’t last forever but   it’d be nice to keep it going a little longer.
 
 Conrad Swanson:       206-464-3805 or   cswanson@seattletimes.com.  Conrad  Swanson is a climate reporter at The Seattle Times whose work  focuses  on climate change and its intersections with environmental and  political  issues.
 
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