Heavy winds expected to fan New Mexico wildfire over weekend
Send a link to a friend
[May 07, 2022] By
Andrew Hay and Tyler Clifford
TAOS, N.M. (Reuters) - Firefighting teams
in New Mexico braced on Friday for a mix of relentless winds,
near-record high temperatures and low humidity expected to stoke a blaze
that has chased thousands from their homes in the mountains and canyons
near Santa Fe.
Forecasts called for steady gale-force winds of up to 45 miles per hour
(72 km/h) to sweep the northern New Mexico fire zone starting Saturday,
accompanied by temperatures in the 90s Fahrenheit and single-digit
humidity readings.
U.S. Forest Service officials said the extreme winds, expected to
persist into early next week, would likely hasten the spread of the
Hermit Peak/Calf Canyon wildfire, which had scorched more than 168,000
acres (67,987 hectares) as of Friday.
At least 165 dwellings have gone up in flames since the blaze erupted on
April 6, though no casualties have been reported.
More than 12,775 homes in Mora and San Miguel counties combined, two of
the hardest hit by the blaze, were under evacuation orders, Michael De
Fries, a spokesperson for the incident management team, said on Friday.
Residents of another 3,000-plus homes have been advised to be ready to
flee on short notice, officials said.
'IT'S TIME TO GO'
San Miguel County Sheriff Chris Lopez urged residents to heed evacuation
orders as the fire threat escalated.
"I'm reiterating to you now, it's time to go," he said at a news
briefing on Friday evening.
Officials earlier this week said as many as 60% of Mora County residents
in evacuation zones were staying put to help defend properties their
families have occupied for generations, even as some run low on food and
water.
The risks are high, even to firefighters, authorities said.
"There’s absolutely no human that can outrun a fire that is going to
move as rapidly as this fire is going to move in the next couple of
days," Todd Abel, a battalion chief with the National Wildfire
Coordinating Group, told the evening briefing.
Fire officials have bolstered their response by deploying more ground
crews and heavy equipment to provide "point protection" of vulnerable
properties in the event flames spread farther north toward clusters of
villages, Abel said.
[to top of second column]
|
The Hermits Peak and Calf Canyon wildfire burns near Las Vegas, New
Mexico, U.S. May 4, 2022. REUTERS/Kevin Mohatt
He said the worsening weather outlook would pose
"some of the harshest firefighting conditions that I've seen."
The fire, which had already blackened an area about half the land
mass of New York City, was 20% contained on Friday morning as it
raged through drought-parched vegetation around several
centuries-old farming and ranching communities in the Sangre de
Cristo mountains northeast of Santa Fe, the state capital.
Steep terrain covered with dense stands of desiccated
timber, large numbers of dead and dying trees, and thick undergrowth
created potentially explosive fuel beds in hard-to-reach areas.
De Fries said the firefighting force of nearly 1,400 personnel was
scrambling in advance of the heavy winds to "create stronger,
deeper" buffer lines by clearing away unburned vegetation around
communities in harm's way.
The Hermits Peak/Calf Canyon blaze was the largest, and most
destructive, of 11 large active fires reported on Friday by the
National Interagency Fire Center across the country, six of them in
New Mexico. The five others totaled nearly 93,000 acres combined.
The fire consists of two blazes that ignited about two weeks apart
and later merged into one, the first originating from a
prescribed-burn project that got out of control. The cause of the
second remains under investigation, officials said.
The U.S. wildfire season has gotten off to an especially early start
this year, with nearly 23,000 blazes of all sizes burning more than
1.27 million acres to date, compared with some 19,000 fires that had
charred 530,000 acres by the same point in 2021, according to the
Idaho-based fire agency.
Scientists say prolonged drought and unseasonably warm weather
driving increasingly extreme, destructive wildfire behavior across
the Western United States in recent years is symptomatic of climate
change.
(Reporting by Andrew Hay in Taos and Tyler Clifford in Washington;
Additional reporting by Brendan O'Brien in Chicago; Writing and
additional reporting by Steve Gorman in Los Angeles; Editing by Bill
Berkrot and Stephen Coates)
[© 2022 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|