(UPDATED 2:13 p.m.) The Sawmill Fire burning north of Sonoita is now estimated to be 18,000 acres in area and is expected to grow today as strong winds push it eastward.
The fire, which started Sunday south of Green Valley near Madera Canyon, blew northeastward across the northern foothills of the Santa Rita Mountains.
It crossed Arizona 83 in two locations Monday night, said Heidi Schewel, spokeswoman for Coronado National Forest.
That highway, which connects Interstate 10 to Sonoita remains closed. Forest roads and trails in the area are also closed temporarily.
Red flag and high-wind advisories are in place from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. today, according to the National Weather Service. Steady winds of 20-to-30 mph with higher gusts are expected.
"The fire is burning in “tall grass, riparian woodland, mesquite/oak brush, oak woodland, and pinyon-juniper fuel types,” according to Heidi Schewel, spokeswoman for Coronado National Forest.
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No buildings have burned so far, but homes, ranches and outbuildings, communications facilities, powerlines, and the Arizona National Scenic Trail remain at risk.
Crews are working to keep the fire south of Box Canyon Road, west of Forest Road 165, and east of Sawmill Canyon, said Tiffany Davila, a spokeswoman for the Department of Forestry and Fire Management, on Tuesday afternoon.
Anyone in the vicinity of the fire should be on alert, Schewel said Tuesday morning.
“The wind can change the speed and direction of a wildfire burning in flammable grass,” Schewel said.
“Communities in the general vicinity need to be aware that wildfire is happening in the area and winds can change direction and speed,” she said.
A multi-agency force of more than 300, aided by planes and helicopters dropping water and fire retardant, are assigned to the fire with a “full-suppression strategy,” said Schewel.
There were no reports of injuries from the wildfire, said Lt. John Cambra, a fire incident commander.
The fire was moving at an angle, south-to-southeast, Cambra said.
The Sonoita-Elgin Fire District posted on Facebook Monday night that the fire swept through residences in the area’s Singing Valley, but no homes were lost.
About 100 people were evacuated Monday from the overall area, including 11 nuns from the Santa Rita Abbey, which is on a hillside near Gardner Canyon in the Santa Rita Mountains about 7 miles northwest of Sonoita. They were directed to an evacuation center at the Santa Cruz County Fairgrounds in Sonoita.
Most evacuees “got snapped up by friends and family in our small, close-knit community,” said fairgrounds manager Jennifer Rinaldi. Residents of Sonoita called and offered up extra rooms in their homes.
The nuns, who are cloistered and mostly silent, found room at a local bed and breakfast. “We fed them. They are great friends of ours,” Rinaldi said.
Officials shut down Arizona 83, which leads from Interstate 10 to Sonoita, in both directions. Motorists should be aware of possible closures and detours throughout the area. A Forest Service road over the Santa Ritas from Arizona 83 at Greaterville was also closed.
There are several service roads on the Coronado National Forest that will temporarily close, including the entrance to Box Canyon. Service roads on the Arizona National Scenic Trail include roads 4110 to 4072, said Schewel. The following trails have also closed: Cave Creek, Sawmill and Florida Canyon.
The closures are to limit traffic while firefighters work to suppress the fire, and the roads may re-open May 8 or earlier, depending on the fire, said Schewel.
Pre-evacuation notices so far included Greaterville and Old Sonoita Highway, Singing Hills Trail, Hidden Hills, Fish Canyon and Gardner Canyon roads, the Sonoita-Elgin Fire District said.
Cambra said more pre-evacuation notices were expected to go out to 80 to 110 people Monday night. His Southeast Arizona incident management team is comprised of state, federal and local entities.
Ranch owners were alerted that they could move their horses and cattle to the fairgrounds in Sonoita, which will serve as an evacuation center for livestock as well as people.
The blaze was reported at noon Sunday, just north of Madera Canyon, about 10 miles southeast of Green Valley. Later, the fire moved into the “heavy timber and pretty treacherous terrain” of Madera Canyon, a part of the Coronado National Forest in the Santa Ritas.
The cause of the fire is under investigation.

