Texarkana Gazette

Forecaster­s warn of rare, dangerous wildfire risk

- By Ken Miller

OKLAHOMA CITY—Forecaster­s warned of dangerous, life-threatenin­g wildfire conditions in parts of the Southwest and Southern Plains on Tuesday, as a forestry official warned firefighte­rs battling a terrifying deadly blaze in Oklahoma that it would be a “historical­ly critical day.”

Gusty winds and low humidity in drought-stricken areas will create dangerous fire conditions in parts of Colorado, Kansas, New Mexico, Oklahoma and Texas, according to the Storm Prediction Center in Norman, Oklahoma. National Weather Service meteorolog­ist Doug Speheger said such conditions haven’t been seen in at least a decade.

By early afternoon Tuesday, temperatur­es that were projected to reach the mid-90s had reached 88 degrees with humidity at 6 percent. Wind gusts forecast to hit 40 mph were at 24 mph. The forecast includes northweste­rn Texas and the Texas Panhandle where firefighti­ng aircraft are stationed in Amarillo, Abilene and surroundin­g areas.

“With these conditions, wildfires can spread rapidly, present control issues for firefighte­rs and pose a real threat to public safety,” said Texas A&M Forest Service Fire Chief Mark Stanford.

Deb Beard, a commander of the Southern Area Incident Management team sent by the U.S. Forest Service, described the conditions as terrifying.

“If you looked at that fire weather forecast … it should scare the hell out of you,” Deb Beard said during a briefing Tuesday posted on the Oklahoma Forestry Service’s Facebook page.

“I hope that you realize that today is a historical­ly critical day here,” Beard said of the fire near Woodward that has burned about 105 square miles. “So do not let your guard down.”

In Oklahoma, two people have died in the fires and nine others have been taken to hospitals for smoke inhalation or heat-related injuries, emergency management officials reported.

Oklahoma Forestry Services reported Tuesday that the largest of the Oklahoma fires has burned more than 388 square miles near Leedey, about 110 miles northwest of Oklahoma City, and was about 3 percent contained.

The fire near Woodward, about 20 miles north of Leedey, is about 45 percent contained, according to the forestry service.

At the fire near Woodward, spokesman John Nichols said firefighte­rs worked Monday to strengthen fire lines in preparatio­n for the gusty weather Tuesday.

“The winds are coming, but wet weather is supposed to be coming too, and we’re hoping the wet weather will arrive,” Nichols said.

The weather service said rain and thundersto­rm chances will increase Thursday night and Friday with strong to severe storms possible in southweste­rn Oklahoma and western north Texas on Friday.

 ?? Copernicus Sentinel Data and Service Informatio­n via AP ?? ■ This satellite image shows smoke from wildfires Friday in Oklahoma. Forecaster­s on Tuesday warned of dangerous, life-threatenin­g wildfire conditions in parts of the Southwest and Southern Plains.
Copernicus Sentinel Data and Service Informatio­n via AP ■ This satellite image shows smoke from wildfires Friday in Oklahoma. Forecaster­s on Tuesday warned of dangerous, life-threatenin­g wildfire conditions in parts of the Southwest and Southern Plains.

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