The sunset on Ash Wednesday (February 18) was beautiful. But, as we stopped at the corner south of our house on that Ash Wednesday evening, I couldn't help but think about how ashes from massive wildfires south of us were helping to color that sunset.
We were returning home after a drive through the baby calves. But 117 miles away or so, other cattle owners were fighting fires for the second day and still trying to move cattle to safety.
It was only nine years ago that so many of these same ranchers lost their homes, farm properties, hundreds of miles of fencing and thousands of cattle in the Starbuck Fire.
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| These were numbers from the 2017 fire. It will be days before everything can be accessed from this latest fire. |
As Greg Gardiner of Gardiner Angus Ranch in Ashland says, their operation was almost to the point where they could say they'd "recovered" from the 2017 fire. Though how do you truly recover from that?
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| The 2026 Ranger Road fire burned more than 283,000 acres. Map courtesy Oklahoma Department of Forestry Wildfires4-RFP-022326. It is still not fully contained - a week after it started. |
Beginning a week ago on February 17, 2026, wildfires ripped across areas of Oklahoma, Kansas, Texas and Nebraska, killing livestock, destroying structures and sending firefighters to the hospital with fire- and smoke-related injuries. Winds gusting over 65 miles per hour drove flames through dry fuel and kept air support grounded.
The largest fire this time, known as the Ranger Road fire, ignited in Beaver County, Oklahoma, and crossed the state line into southern Kansas, burning more than 283,000 acres. The towns of Ashland and Englewood, Kansas, were evacuated, as were rural residents along the fire's path.
In television interviews, Gardiner says they learned many lessons from the Starbuck Fire in 2017, and they used that knowledge to try and mitigate the losses in 2026. But even your best efforts doesn't mean that you are able to dodge the inevitable.
I sometimes wonder about the people who settled the Kansas prairie. Did
they marvel at the sky? Did the call of birds wake them to see the hint
of color painting the eastern horizon? As their covered wagons rumbled
toward the west, did they marvel at the sunsets?
I imagine the temperaments that marked the people who set off from established homes in the eastern part of the U.S. and decided on adventure, traveling westward to a new kind of life.
Since the state was established in 1861, Kansans have had to pick up the pieces from all kinds of natural disasters. Why do they do it?
That pioneer spirit brought people to Kansas. And some of the heartiness remains generations later.
Maybe the fortitude to stay had something to do with the joy of seeing those cute faces in their cattle herds. As we drove through the cattle lots and watched the baby calves race one another or sip contentedly from their personal "mama milk machines," I couldn't help but think of the ranchers still battling the wildfires.
For those in the wildfires' paths, lives won't go back to normal anytime soon. They are still burying their livelihoods in big mass graves in the burned ground. They are tending to injured cattle, bottle feeding babies whose mothers died, rebuilding thousands of miles of fence. And some of them no longer have a home where they can lay their weary heads come nighttime, after days of physical labor and emotional heartache.
Even today - a week later - firefighters aren't saying the wildfires are totally under control. Instead, they say the blazes are "90 percent" under control. And today is another day when the wind is howling, stoking those embers yet again.
It's going to take a new pioneer spirit for them to rebuild. Just like us, their families have been on Kansas soil for five generations, and, for a few, even six generations. That pioneer spirit is part of their DNA.
Like us, they delight in seeing new life every spring.To assist livestock producers affected by the Ranger Road fire, please reach out to any of the following. That way, you know the money or supplies will go to the people who need it:
SHAW FEEDYARD: Shaw Feedyard in Ashland is a drop point for hay. Please contact Ryan Koons at (620) 805-4682 if you have any questions. The address is 2428 CR 15 in Ashland, KS.
ASHLAND FEED & SEED: Ashland Feed & Seed is a drop point for hay and feed. The address is 1975 CR U, Ashland, KS 67831. Contact the main office: (620) 635-2856.
Cash donations can be made to the ASHLAND COMMUNITY FOUNDATION. One hundred percent of the money will be redistributed to those in need. You can donate directly by clicking https://www.ashlandcf.com/donate-today or mail or drop off monetary donations to STOCKGROWERS STATE BANK, 622 Main Street, Ashland, KS 67831, or mail checks to ASHLAND COMMUNITY FOUNDATION, P.O. Box 276, Ashland, KS 67831.
KANSAS LIVESTOCK ASSOCIATION is helping organize in-kind donations for delivery to affected areas in Kansas. To donate hay or trucking services, call KLA at (785) 273-5115. Cash donations can be made through the Kansas Livestock Foundation (KLF), KLA’s charitable arm, by going to www.kla.org
and clicking on Donate under 2026 Wildfire Donations. Checks can be sent to 6031 SW 37th, Topeka, KS 66614. Please put “wildfire relief” in the memo line. KLF is a 501 c(3) organization. Donations to the foundation are tax-deductible. All funds will be used to support fire relief efforts for Kansas producers.
From Isaiah 61 - The Year of the Lord’s Favor
61 The Spirit of the Sovereign Lord is on me,
because the Lord has anointed me
to proclaim good news to the poor.
He has sent me to bind up the brokenhearted,
to proclaim freedom for the captives
and release from darkness for the prisoners,
2 to proclaim the year of the Lord’s favor
and the day of vengeance of our God,
to comfort all who mourn,
3 and provide for those who grieve in Zion—
to bestow on them a crown of beauty
instead of ashes,
the oil of joy
instead of mourning,
and a garment of praise
instead of a spirit of despair.
They will be called oaks of righteousness,
a planting of the Lord
for the display of his splendor.
4 They will rebuild the ancient ruins
and restore the places long devastated;
they will renew the ruined cities that have been devastated for generations.


































