Explore photos and videos of the fire in the Poudre Canyon

Use this interactive map to navigate to places in the Poudre where photos were taken of the Cameron Peak Fire and post-wildfire flooding.

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View from Rustic Resort on September 5, 2020, a couple days before the fire reached the Rustic area (Jenny Dimon).

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Infrared footage from Labor Day, 2020 (U.S. Forest Service)

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Canyonside Campground on 9/7/2020, the day Norman Fry country burned and the fire jumped the river over to Poudre City (Lisa Bruen).

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View from Archers on Labor Day 2020 (Lisa Bruen).

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Footage captured by Phil Parrot's wildlife camera on Labor Day as the fire approached and burned around Fairkytes. The flames incinerated the studio and privy but left the house and Duck Inn intact. Of the three houses over Norman Fry Road bridge, Fairkytes was the only one to survive.

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Taken from the Black Hollow Drainage looking south towards the fire on Labor Day, 2020.

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Another photo taken from the same location on Labor Day, 2020 (Dan Bond).

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Overlooking Norman Fry Road bridge on Labor Day 2020 (Justin Smith).

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Taken in October 2020 from Masonville (Butch Vannorsdel).

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The Pinehurst Homestead nine days after it burned (Sue Schneider).

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The view from behind the Pinehurst Homestead nine days after it burned (Sue Schneider).

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Taken near the Twin Pines Homestead a couple months after it burned (Sue Schneider).

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View of the Black Hollow bridge after the debris flow on July 20, 2021 (taken by CBS).

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Video of a flash flood on Sheep Creek in Norman Fry country, which occurred at the same time as the debris flow at Black Hollow (taken by Maya Daurio).

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Photo taken by Clyde Romero Jr. of pieces of his house destroyed by the Black Hollow debris flow.

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Debris deposits from July 2021 as seen in May 2023 (Maya Daurio).

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Crown Point Road near the headwaters of Black Hollow three years after the fire (Maya Daurio). The higher elevation headwaters near Black Hollow still has little regeneration of vegetation.

View from Rustic Resort on September 5, 2020, a couple days before the fire reached the Rustic area (Jenny Dimon).

Infrared footage from Labor Day, 2020 (U.S. Forest Service)

Canyonside Campground on 9/7/2020, the day Norman Fry country burned and the fire jumped the river over to Poudre City (Lisa Bruen).

View from Archers on Labor Day 2020 (Lisa Bruen).

Footage captured by Phil Parrot's wildlife camera on Labor Day as the fire approached and burned around Fairkytes. The flames incinerated the studio and privy but left the house and Duck Inn intact. Of the three houses over Norman Fry Road bridge, Fairkytes was the only one to survive.

Taken from the Black Hollow Drainage looking south towards the fire on Labor Day, 2020.

Dan Bond hiked up Black Hollow drainage on Labor Day to see if he could catch a glimpse of the wildfire, not realizing how close it was until he got up the drainage and was able to see flames. He went back home immediately, packed up, and evacuated.

Another photo taken from the same location on Labor Day, 2020 (Dan Bond).

Overlooking Norman Fry Road bridge on Labor Day 2020 (Justin Smith).

This photo, posted on social media, was the first information the Abbott and Lukens families had that their historic homes likely burned.

Taken in October 2020 from Masonville (Butch Vannorsdel).

The Pinehurst Homestead nine days after it burned (Sue Schneider).

This was the first time anyone in the Abbott family was able to see the remains of the Pinehurst homestead after it had burned.

The view from behind the Pinehurst Homestead nine days after it burned (Sue Schneider).

Taken near the Twin Pines Homestead a couple months after it burned (Sue Schneider).

In the months directly after the Cameron Peak fire ran through Norman Fry country on Labor Day, the land was almost unrecognizable.

View of the Black Hollow bridge after the debris flow on July 20, 2021 (taken by CBS).

Video of a flash flood on Sheep Creek in Norman Fry country, which occurred at the same time as the debris flow at Black Hollow (taken by Maya Daurio).

Photo taken by Clyde Romero Jr. of pieces of his house destroyed by the Black Hollow debris flow.

Debris deposits from July 2021 as seen in May 2023 (Maya Daurio).

July 2021 was an active month for debris flows throughout the upper canyon. Boston Peak experienced a very large debris flow about a week after the Black Hollow debris flow.

Crown Point Road near the headwaters of Black Hollow three years after the fire (Maya Daurio). The higher elevation headwaters near Black Hollow still has little regeneration of vegetation.