The Commercial Appeal

Southwest braces for new fire danger

- Susan Montoya Bryan and Scott Sonner

ALBUQUERQU­E, N.M. – Thousands of firefighte­rs continued to slow the advance of destructiv­e wildfires in the southweste­rn U.S., but officials warned they were bracing for the return Friday of the same dangerous conditions that quickly spread the wind-fueled blazes a week ago.

At least 166 homes have been destroyed in one rural county in northeast New Mexico since the biggest fire currently burning in the U.S. started racing through small towns east and northeast of Santa Fe on April 22, the local sheriff said.

Winds gusting up to 50 mph were forecast Friday in the drought-stricken region. One expert said it’s a recipe for disaster in the wildlands where some timber has a fuel moisture drier than kiln-dried wood.

“It’s a very, very dangerous fire day tomorrow,” fire behavior specialist Stewart Turner said at a briefing Thursday night on the edge of the Santa Fe National Forest in Las Vegas, New Mexico.

“Like we saw last Friday, epic fire behavior,” Turner said. “It’s a day that as a firefighte­r, we’ll write about, we’ll read studies about. It’s going to be a big fire day.”

A swath of the country stretching from New Mexico and Colorado to Kansas and the Texas panhandle is expected to be hit the hardest by the return of the bad firefighti­ng weather that has generated unusually hot and fast-moving fires for this time of year, forecaster­s warned.

Red flag warnings for extreme fire danger were in place Friday for nearly all of New Mexico and parts of Colorado, Texas, Oklahoma and Kansas.

More than 3,000 firefighte­rs were battling fires in Arizona and New Mexico on Friday – about half of those in northeast New Mexico, where more than 187 square miles of mostly timber and brush have been charred.

Sheriff Chris Lopez, of New Mexico’s Miguel County, confirmed for the first time Thursday night the fire there has destroyed at least 166 homes, 108 outbuildin­gs and three commercial buildings. He joined authoritie­s in neighborin­g Mora County in pleading with residents to pay close attention Friday to sudden changes in closures and evacuation orders.

“Falling trees, possibly falling power lines, that’s the kind of winds we’re looking at,” Lopez said.

In northern Arizona, authoritie­s downgraded some some evacuation orders at a fire that has destroyed at least 30 homes near Flagstaff. It’s now estimated to be 43% contained. Another fire 10 miles south of the community of Prescott was 23% contained, but officials at both blazes warned of worsening conditions expected Friday.

Elsewhere, one national wildfire management incident team continued to oversee a large prairie fire in Nebraska, where more than 200 firefighte­rs were battling a blaze that has been burning since last week.

About 68 square miles of mostly grasses and farmland have been blackened near Nebraska’s state line with Kansas. Several homes were destroyed, and at least one person was killed. That fire was 97% contained Friday.

 ?? J. MICHAEL JOHNSON/U.S. FOREST SERVICE VIA AP ?? A “super scooper” aircraft battles fires in the Santa Fe National Forest in New Mexico on Thursday.
J. MICHAEL JOHNSON/U.S. FOREST SERVICE VIA AP A “super scooper” aircraft battles fires in the Santa Fe National Forest in New Mexico on Thursday.

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