Newscast 7-15-26
Por KOTO News
julio 15, 2026
- Firefighters Begin Repair Work on Ferris Fire Land
- Finding the Glorians with Terry Tempest Williams
- Goats Return to the Valley Floor
Firefighters Begin Repair Work on Ferris Fire Land
The Ferris Fire is currently burning roughly 65,000 acres in Dolores County, stretching from the Montezuma County line to the San Miguel County line. At broadcast deadline, the fire was 43% contained.
While active suppression measures are in effect on one side of the fire, just several miles away, firefighters are working on repair efforts.
“Probably half the fire still has a lot of suppression and mop up work done. We have hotshot crews engaged today with helicopter support trying to tie in a pretty challenging piece of fire line. But 10 miles away the fire has been out there for 10 days or more,” said Tom Himmelrich, an operations section chief with the Incident Management Team in charge of managing the Ferris Fire.
“It’s like a tale of two fires, where on one side we can start regrading roads and starting to get back to some normalcy, but on the far northern end it’s a very different story,” Himmelrich said.
Himmelrich said crews continue to be strategic in how they’re battling the fire, with the main focus on putting it out. But where possible, they’re beginning to move the landscape back to its pre-fire condition.
“The goal is in suppression repair to bring the state of the land back to, as close to, pre-fire conditions as possible,” Himmelrich said.
During firefighting operations, crews construct containment lines, improve existing roads, install hose lays and utilize heavy equipment. Suppression repair helps return those impacts to stable conditions while protecting natural resources, reducing erosion and minimizing long-term impacts to the landscape.
“So, what that means is any berms that were created by bulldozers is scattering that back out, any brush and trees and material that had been cut and stacked in certain areas, we have chippers and we go back and chip some of the cut brush. Other brush we may scatter over firelines to help prevent erosion; in some places the ground will even be reseeded to help with erosion and regrowth,” Himmelrich said.
Himmelrich said the repair work is a collaboration between state, federal and private entities.
He said the goal is to leave the landscape in the best possible condition while ensuring public and firefighter safety.
Ferris Fire officials will hold a community meeting Thursday, July 16, at 6 p.m. at the Dolores County Public Service Center, 8477 Road 7.7, in Dove Creek.
As firefighters continue to work and begin repairing the landscape, some local advocates are also thinking about what the fire could mean for the Dolores River Canyon, one of the region’s most distinctive ecosystems.
For Rocky Mountain Community Radio, KSJD’s L.P. McKay has the story.
Story begins at 3:25.
Finding the Glorians with Terry Tempest Williams
Terry Tempest Williams’ newest book came to her in a dream.
“The dream I had was this,” Tempest Williams recounted. “I was walking across Harvard Yard. It was fall, resplendent. Red maples, bronze oaks and vibrant yellow birch. I knew I had to get to the tower. There is no tower. I turn, I see the tower. I walk toward it, and I notice that there are two entry points. Up the direct staircase or to the side, a spiral staircase. I choose the spiral staircase. I go around, around, around. Once on top, I realize I’m standing in the ruins of Cassandra’s temple. I have the distinct feeling that I’ve forgotten something. I hear my name called. I turn, I walk toward it, there I see a woman walking up the direct path with students behind her. She’s a professor. The gate is locked. She says, ‘Terry, do you remember the vow you made to us?’ And I say, ‘Remind me.’ And she says, ‘Your vow is the epic documentation of the Glorians.’
“And then I wake up and I think, ‘What is a Glorian?'” she remembered. “And that’s really the genesis of the book.”
The dream took place on March 20, 2020 — the only dream, Tempest Williams says, that she can remember the exact date of. The United States had just gone into lockdown because of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Six years later, her book, The Glorians: Visitations from the Holy Ordinary, is out and is the Wilkinson Public Library’s One Book, One Canyon selection.
KOTO News spoke with Tempest Williams about the book, being present in a complicated world, and the joys and challenges of life in a small town.
Julia Caulfield (JC): Asking you to maybe put some words to something that isn’t fully describable. But when you look into the world and you are looking for Glorians, what does that mean? What is this kind of indescribable thing?
Terry Tempest Williams (TTW): Well, I think I did what anyone in this era would do. When I woke up that morning, I thought, “Okay, I’m going to go to Google. I’m going to Google ‘Glorian.'” I did. Nothing comes up. I go into the darkest recesses of the internet. Nothing comes up. And I let it go.
A year later, I realized I am haunted by this word. I’m hunted by this word. And I try it again, and I type in “Glorian.” Voila. This time it comes up on Urban Dictionary, and it reads: “Glorian, a hoarder of toilet paper.” And I think, this is not what I was looking for. And again, I just let it go.
And as so often is the case, in letting it go, I encountered a Glorian, and that happened to be an ant carrying a coyote blossom, magenta, the size of our index finger, across our patio.
I talk about following that Glorian, that wee little being. It was in that moment, as I watched it push, push, push, push that blossom all the way to its destination, which was its ant colony, after following it for 30 minutes. Watching it almost fall off the lip of our porch, helped by three attending ants who came up around, lifted it, and placed it back in its mandibles as it made its way onto the desert floor. Up ahead, I see this prickly pear patch. And I think it’s going to be impaled. Again, three attending ants appear, up and around each spine, each cactus, and it makes its way onto its colony, with again those attending ants vanishing. When it gets to the top, it lays its blossom down. Dozens and dozens and dozens of ants emerge, breaking down that blossom into the tiniest of pieces, disappearing into the heart of the colony, where I imagine this blossom is lining the pathway to the queen.
“Glorian,” I thought. “This is what a Glorian is.” A moment of grace: undeserved, unwarranted, unimagined, Élan vital. I think where it took me was this idea, Julia, that if we are present, we will know what to do.
I had a perfect definition, I have to tell you, four points of what a Glorian was. And then, as you suggested, I realized this is not something that can be defined.
Who am I to say what a Glorian is?
Who am I to say what God is?
Who are any of us to say?
All we can do is be present and be uplifted, be challenged, be carried away by a moment, a memory, an animal, a bird, another person, where our attention is fused. Time both stops and expands, and we are changed.
JC: I think you maybe just spoke to it a little bit, but how do you feel like we can gain more understanding of what is grand and holy and unknown through these experiences, these Glorian experiences that are small and ordinary and just really pull you into the present?
TTW: Well, I think that the key — you just mentioned — it’s the ordinary, the holy ordinary. It’s around us all the time. It’s being present to the world that we inhabit. I think as Westerners and Southwesterners, it’s around us every minute, if we will but look and pay attention.
I think about the valley in Telluride, just the magnificent peaks in the San Juans. I think about living in Castle Valley with Castleton Tower, that we know now through geologists — and Native people have always known — it has a pulse. The Colorado River in flood and in drought. Great Salt Lake.
We live and are humbled by the physical presences that surround us. I think at a time where everything is so uncertain, the Glorians remind us what endures. And to me, that’s the application. That’s the encounter that gives us buoyancy, that reminds us what endures.
JC: I think, and I imagine that this can happen everywhere. You say that Telluride and this little box canyon that we are in is a Glorian. I think it’s one of those things that when you live in a place, not that you forget or stop paying attention to the beauty and the wonder around you, but the hardness of real life — work, and in a place like Telluride, a huge influx of visitors, and the stress and the energy literally bouncing off the walls — can sometimes feel overwhelming and can sometimes maybe hinder our ability to tap into those, or to really be able to see them in our day-to-day lives.
So how do you encourage, how would you recommend that folks take those moments and find those places of presence and find those Glorians, even when sometimes, on the local level, the personal level, all the way up to the national, international level, things can feel so overwhelming?
TTW: I’m right there with you, and I certainly have no answers.
There is that shadow side to small communities. I know that in Castle Valley, we certainly know that in Grand County, in Moab, we are not anonymous.
You have to face your neighbor at the post office. You have a flash flood, and you have to go to your neighbor who has signs about MAGA and a billboard that says, “If you are not my friend, you are my target.” And there’s a huge American flag the size of a bedsheet hanging, waving in the wind, with a bullet hole through the target.
It’s not easy, but it’s real. It’s not abstract. And it’s worth it. It’s worth, I think, the struggle, the vitality of the struggle.
Living in Cambridge, I didn’t know anyone, and I was completely anonymous. I was not accountable to anyone. If I didn’t like a particular establishment, I could go elsewhere.
That’s not the case in Moab or in Telluride. We have to make peace with our neighbors. We have to be authentic and honest. We have to apologize. We have to be on hard boards. We have to disagree. It can be rough.
But on the other hand, when there’s that flash flood, I was knee-deep in muck with my Mormon neighbors and my MAGA neighbors, and it was very clear there was a lot more that bound us together than took us apart.
I think that’s really important to remember. Small communities, desert communities, mountain communities — we know each other. We have to look each other in the eye, and we keep shaking hands and begin again. Engagement. Something deeper than hope. We’re in this together.
JC: Do you have a practice of looking, specifically going out and looking for Glorians, or do you allow them to simply come to you as they do? And how does that maybe shift the lens through which you see the whole world?
TTW: I don’t go out looking for Glorians. You’ll never find them. I think it’s just living your life and paying attention, and something catches your eye.
Again, I’m repeating myself, but being present with where we are and paying attention.
I love what Simone Weil writes: “Attention is a prayer.”
How do we live more wholly — whole — and holy?
I think we are not only in a political crisis and an ecological crisis, but I think we’re in a spiritual crisis. What do we believe? What do we hold fast? What are we willing to stay with? To me, those are the questions that live in my heart.
And in those moments, all of a sudden, you see more clearly and you think, “Oh, this is a Glorian.” I think each of us, in our own way, with the gifts that are ours, can make a difference. Again, I go back to our own home ground: Telluride. Castle Valley. Colorado. Utah. I don’t know what to do nationally, but I do know what to do locally. And to me, this is the radius of care.
Terry Tempest Williams spoke with KOTO News to discuss her new book, The Glorians: Visitations from the Holy Ordinary.
Tempest Williams will be in Telluride for a book talk as part of the Wilkinson Public Library’s One Book, One Canyon program.
The talk will take place at the library on Thursday, July 16, at 5:30 p.m.
Goats Return to the Valley Floor
Shakespeare In the Park Goes Once More Unto the Breach
“Once more unto the breach, dear friends!” – Henry V
This summer, Telluride Theatre is bringing William Shakespeare’s war drama, Henry V, to life for Shakespeare in the Park.
This year’s production features more than a dozen local actors and follows King Henry V as he assumes the English throne and wages war to conquer France. Along the way, there’s treason, horseplay, battles, leaks and a bit of a rom-com.
Telluride Theatre’s production of Henry V opens Friday, July 17, and runs through Saturday, July 25.
Tickets are available at telluridetheatre.org.
Montrose Honors Fallen Gold Mountain Firefighter
A pilot supporting firefighting operations on the Gold Mountain Fire was killed Sunday when his aircraft crashed into a nearby reservoir.
As KVNF’s Audrey McCabe reports for Rocky Mountain Community Radio, community members lined the streets of Montrose on Monday to pay their respects.
Story begins at 27:35.
Noticias recientes
Newscast 7-13-26
julio 13, 2026
- ICE Arrests Man Outside San Miguel County Jail
- Firefighter Dies Battling Gold Mountain
- Charles Dalton Elected to Telluride Town Council
Newscast 7-10-26
julio 10, 2026
On this week's Regional Roundup, we'll hear about the extreme fire danger facing communities across the Rocky Mountain West. Then, we go to Aspen, where an all-American form of dance called Bandaloop turned the side of a building into a stage during the Fourth of July weekend. After that, we'll visit Boulder where a gun safety initiative is giving free safes to firearm owners. Next, we'll head to Wyoming, where volunteers are removing miles of old barbed wire fence to make it easier for wildlife to migrate. And we'll wrap up the show in Utah, spending time with drag performer Diana Lone as she prepares for a show at Why Kiki Bar in Salt Lake City.
Newscast 7-9-26
julio 9, 2026
- A Ferris Fire Update
- West End Roundup with the San Miguel Basin Forum
- Pescador de películas de gatos con Risho Unda


