'Huge firefight' to defend New Mexico villages, city from blaze
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[May 02, 2022] By
Andrew Hay
TAOS, N.M. (Reuters) - Thousands of
residents of northern New Mexico villages evacuated on Sunday as fierce
winds drove the largest active U.S. wildfire towards their
drought-parched mountain valley.
Winds gusting over 40 mph (64 kph) blew embers a mile ahead of the blaze
to start new fires as bulldozers carved fire breaks to protect the
villages of Ledoux, Mora and Cleveland around 40 miles (64 km) northeast
of Santa Fe.
They are among farming communities and an Old West city in the path of
the Calf Canyon fire, the most destructive of a dozen Southwest blazes
that scientists say are more widespread and arriving earlier this year
due to climate change.
"Where are we supposed to run to, where do we go, this is where our
livelihoods are," said Darlene Gallegos, a farmer and co-owner of Mora's
country market, after police told her to close the store and flee the
village of 1,000 settled in Spanish colonial times.
Twenty miles to the south at the other end of the 104,000 acre (42,100
hectares) megafire, some residents of Las Vegas, New Mexico, were told
to prepare for evacuation as winds drove the fire within 5 miles of
homes near interstate highway 25.
Those communities in the west of the city could be evacuated "in the
near future," New Mexico Game and Fish official Shawn Carrell told a
briefing.
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Smoke from the Calf Canyon fire is seen from Mora village, New
Mexico, U.S., April 29, 2022. REUTERS/Andrew Hay
Crews bulldozed firebreaks to the north and west of
the historic university town of 14,000 to protect ranches, rural
houses and the United World College.
Firefighters were hampered by strong, erratic winds set to keep
shifting direction until Thursday.
"This kind of keeps spinning around on us," said Incident Commander
Dave Bales. "There is still a huge firefight going on up there," he
said of crews working through the night near Mora.
Burning since April 6, the fire has destroyed hundreds of properties
and forced the evacuation of dozens of settlements in the Sangre de
Cristo Mountains, but has yet to claim a life.
(Reporting by Andrew Hay in Taos, New Mexico; Editing by Will
Dunham, Marguerita Choy and Jacqueline Wong)
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