Marin Independent Journal

Dangerous winds return to fire-scorched region

- By Cedar Attanasio and Brian Melley

>> After a few days of calm allowed some families who had fled wildfires raging in northeast New Mexico to return to their homes, dangerous winds picked up again Sunday, threatenin­g to spread burning embers that could ignite new fires and complicate work for firefighte­rs.

More than 1,500 firefighte­rs were on the fire lines at the biggest blaze east and northeast of Santa Fe, which grew another 8 square miles overnight to an area more than twice as large as the city of Philadelph­ia.

The area's largest rural town — Las Vegas, New Mexico, population 13,000 — appeared safe for now thanks to fire lines dug by bulldozers and other priority preparatio­ns over the past week.

But authoritie­s appealed to residents on the outskirts who've already been ordered to evacuate to delay no longer.

“If things start picking up today as they are expected to do,” fire spokesman Todd Abel warned Sunday, and “you are trying to leave the area and we are trying to go in, that obviously causes a lot of problems, congestion, confusion.”

A red-flag warning was in effect, kicking off what fire officials predicted would be another “historic, multi-day wind event that could result in extreme fire behavior.”

A few helicopter­s were able to gather new informatio­n from the air on the spread of the flames early Sunday “but they won't be up there very long because of the winds out there,” Abel said.

“The wind is incredible. is precedent setting, the

amount of wind we are going to have and the duration we are going to have it,” he said a briefing Sunday in Las Vegas.

“They are predicting the wind to blow all day today, through the night, all day tomorrow so that is a long time for our fire,” he said.

Thousands of residents have evacuated due to flames that have charred large swaths of the Sangre de Cristo Mountains in northeaste­rn New Mexico — a total of 275 square miles.

The swirling winds gusting up to 50 mph made it difficult to predict where the flames would go later Sunday and into Monday.

Ryan Berlin, fire informatio­n officer, said Sunday afternoon the city of Las Vegas itself is “very safe at this point.”

“We even started to repopulate a section of town already,” he said. “Our concern right now is on the southwest portion of the fire which the wind is helping us out, sort of, because it's blowing the flames back into the fire.”

But Wendy Mason with the New Mexico Forestry Division warned that “by no means” is anyone “out of potential danger.”

“Just because the winds are coming from one direction doesn't mean they can't change direction so it's better to be prepared and have residents ready to go,” she said.

“Any new fire that starts has a good potential of becoming extremely active and any ongoing fires we'll also see extreme activity because of this historic combinatio­n of fire weather that we're seeing right now,” she added.

Abel said the good news was that additional fire crews continue to arrive from around the West.

For many California firefighte­rs backing up local units, the winds in New Mexico are puzzling. Unlike the sustained Santa Ana winds in southern California, the air around the Hermit's Peak/Calf Canyon fires in New Mexico have swirled around and been redirected in complex and changing interactio­ns with the mountains.

 ?? JIM WEBER — SANTA FE NEW MEXICAN VIA AP ?? A flare up near Cleveland, just down 519from Mora, N.M. darkens the sky on Wednesday where firefighte­rs have been battling the Hermit's Peak and Calf Canyon fire for weeks.
JIM WEBER — SANTA FE NEW MEXICAN VIA AP A flare up near Cleveland, just down 519from Mora, N.M. darkens the sky on Wednesday where firefighte­rs have been battling the Hermit's Peak and Calf Canyon fire for weeks.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States