The Columbus Dispatch

Winds impair fight against fire in NM

- Cedar Attanasio and Kathleen Ronayne

LAS VEGAS, N.M. – Dangerous, gusty winds were expected to continue Monday across northeast New Mexico, complicati­ng the fight against wildfires that threaten thousands of homes in mountainou­s rural communitie­s.

The region’s largest city – Las Vegas, New Mexico, home to 13,000 people – was largely safe from danger after firefighte­rs mostly stopped a blaze there from moving east. But the northern and southern flanks of the wildfire proved trickier to contain as wind gusts topped 50 mph.

“It’s been a challengin­g day. The winds have picked up; they haven’t let up,” fire spokespers­on Todd Abel said Sunday night.

A so-called red flag warning that indicates high fire danger due to heat, low humidity and fast winds was to remain in place through Monday night, nearly four days after it began.

More than 1,600 firefighte­rs were out Sunday battling the two major blazes burning northeast of Santa Fe, New Mexico. Together they covered 275 square miles, an area more than twice the size of Philadelph­ia. Firefighte­rs had contained nearly half of the blazes by Sunday night.

Still, the threat was far from over, with the National Interagenc­y Fire Center saying early Sunday that more than 20,000 structures remained threatened by the fire, which has destroyed about 300 residences over the past two weeks.

Fast winds are in many ways firefighte­rs’ worst nightmare, especially in conditions as hot and dry as those the crews have been battling in the Southwest since early April.

In addition to fanning and spreading the flames, these winds keep air tankers and light planes grounded. That left them unable to drop water directly on the fire or lay down retardant ahead of its path to allow bulldozers and ground crews to dig firebreaks in places where there are no highways or roads to help stop the progressio­n.

In extreme conditions, like the ones in New Mexico, even the helicopter­s that can typically get up in the air – at least during the early morning hours, before winds start to pick up in the afternoon – are grounded. That prevents them from gathering intelligen­ce about overnight developmen­ts. Aircraft were able to fly early Sunday but were grounded by the afternoon.

“It’s not good, obviously; it takes away a tool in our toolbox, but we’re not stopping,” said fire spokespers­on Ryan Berlin.

Officials were concerned about winds that had whipped up more flames on the northern edge of the fire near some very small communitie­s of several hundred people. Gusts had driven fire down into a canyon, making it difficult to access, said Dave Bales, the incident commander.

He and other officials strongly urged people to be ready to evacuate or to leave immediatel­y if they’ve been told to do so.

Should the fire overwhelm a community, heavy smoke and congested roads could make it hard for people to flee and for firefighte­rs to access the area, he said.

“It is so thick you can’t see; you can’t drive; you can’t see the engine ahead of you,” Bales said.

 ?? ROBERT BROWMAN/AP ?? A wildfire on the southern flanks of Las Vegas, N.M., has been difficult for fire crews to contain.
ROBERT BROWMAN/AP A wildfire on the southern flanks of Las Vegas, N.M., has been difficult for fire crews to contain.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States