Skip to main content

Boreal Community Media

Never-before-seen photos show cabin damage from Greenwood Fire

Sep 24, 2021 06:37AM ● By Editor
This photos shows Pat Prochaska's boardwalk at his cabin after the fire.  Photo Credit: Pat Prochaska

By Jennifer Hoff of KARE 11 News - September 23, 2021


The Greenwood Fire is still burning in northeastern Minnesota but it could be fully contained by Oct. 14.  It's now burned about 27,000 acres.

Lightning sparked the fire that was discovered in the Superior National Forest on Aug. 15. Fire danger in the state was quite high then, but according to the Department of Natural Resources, it's now low across the entire state.

Pat Prochaska's home was barely spared by the fire and, for the first time, he's sharing photos of the aftermath.

A shed, and everything inside, was destroyed. So, too, are the trees on his 18 acres. Prochaska is left to only look at old photos of them in their full, green glory.

"That was 30 to 40 feet from those two watering cans that didn't even get touched," Prochaska said about items that were spared, including his cabin, which even mystified local law enforcement.


Watering cans outside Pat Prochaska's cabin remain untouched after the Greenwood Fire raged through his property. Credit: Pat Prochaska

"When we went to the checkpoint and told them where we were going, I gave the address and you could just see his little wheels working in his head and he said, 'Oh, you're the cabin that survived,'" said Prochaska.

Melted siding and some cracked windows are the only scars to show on the cabin that escaped what its neighbors couldn't — one just right across the road.

More than a dozen primary homes burned down. Prochaska says he's positive a dirt trench around his cabin, the asphalt roof and defensible space helped.

"It was my habit in June every year to mow around that whole circle around the house," he said, also citing the lack of rain as a reason the fire didn't reach further. "That whole area was almost dirt, which I think was a helpful thing because there wasn’t anything to carry the fire towards the house."

A good lesson for anyone living in the forest, that while beautiful, can be ripe for wildfires. 

Aftermath of the Greenwood Fire
Prochaska has been allowed to visit his property twice. The main highway is still partially closed. But if you're visiting the National Forest or Boundary Waters, all the restrictions have been fully lifted.


To see the original story and read related reporting, follow this link to the KARE 11 News website.  https://www.kare11.com/article/news/local/wildfire/cabin-owner-shares-never-before-seen-photos-green...

Watch the KARE 11 News Report here

Boreal Ship Spotter - larger view here