
Evidence of last year’s fire is visible even before reaching the gates of the Black Canyon of the Gunnison National Park.
Charred tree trunks cover the mountainside that borders the road leading up to the south rim entrance, located near Montrose on Colorado’s Western Slope. Some have been reduced to inches-high stumps, while others jut up leafless like distorted thorns from the landscape. Once inside the park, visitors get a more pronounced visual of the fire’s path, which stretches along the South Rim Road in the form of torched bushes, trees and soil that add new shades of black to the canyon’s motif.
The South Rim Fire sparked on July 10, 2025 when dry lightning struck an area near the High Point lookout, about six miles west of the national park’s visitor center. Strong winds led the wildfire to quickly spread across the drought-stricken terrain, consuming flora and some manmade structures along the way. In all, the fire scorched 4,323 acres and wilderness on the steep walls inside the canyon burned for eight weeks.

But one year later, signs of new life are abundant at the Black Canyon — something worth remembering as wildfires yet again rage throughout Colorado.
Stems of new growth lush with green leaves pop up at the base of burned Gambel oak trees. Vibrant wildflowers blanket the scenery on the Uplands hiking trail, capitalizing on the space made by burned groundcover and the extra nutrients the fire released back into the soil. They juxtapose the harsh burn scars with pops of color to dramatic effect.
Wildlife has also returned thanks to “deeper-than-expected soils” that helped the grasslands regenerate expeditiously, said Brinnen Carter, Integrated Resource Manager for Black Canyon of the Gunnison National Park.
“The first flush of grasses both in the fall and this spring has created expanded opportunities (sic) for the deer, sheep, and elk that use Vernal Mesa, with new and more expansive grazing areas opened,” Carter explained by email. “As habitat continues to recover, we expect some wildlife populations and their use of the area to increase.”
Still, it will likely take decades for the plants to grow back to their former glory. Atop the Vernal Mesa, where the south rim of the canyon is located, much of the pinyon pine and juniper tree forest was reduced to ashes. It may take 40 to 50 years for those to regenerate, Carter said.
Where the burns are not as severe, Gambel oak may pop back up sooner. Carter has seen other Gambel oak forests, where live root systems remain intact after a fire, recover more quickly. Vegetation may return to a pre-fire appearance within 10 to 15 years, he said.
“Wildfires can reshape ecosystems, and in some cases, they create conditions for new plant communities to become established,” Carter said. “The pace and extent of recovery will depend on several factors, including precipitation, the spread of invasive plants, and the successful establishment of native vegetation during the early stages of recovery.”
Despite the damage, itap worth remembering that the Black Canyon’s rock formations, the real draw, were unaltered by the South Rim Fire. The craggy walls still plunge thousands of feet into the Gunnison River below, offering breathtaking — and knee-buckling — views to those peering over the edges. The famous Painted Wall is still streaked by hardened magma that squeezed into layers of schist and gneiss rocks billions of years ago. Those who travel the East Portal Road down the river’s edge will still find the gold-medal waters that draw fishermen and women from far and wide.
While much has changed at the Black Canyon in light of the wildfire, its allure most definitely has not.









