Under an orange sky, largest U.S. wildfire menaces New Mexico towns
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[May 12, 2022] By
Andrew Hay
BLACK LAKE, N.M. (Reuters) -Firefighters in
northern New Mexico labored under an apocalyptic orange sky, and
vehicles streamed out of the ski area of Angel Fire on Wednesday as
wind-driven flames from the state's second-largest blaze on record
roared closer to the mountain resort.
With winds gusting beyond 50 mph (80 kmh) through dense, drought-parched
forests, exhausted crews were at loss to stop a wildfire that has raged
across a 45-mile swath of the Sangre de Cristo Mountains for more than a
month, destroying hundreds of homes.
Spreading through the rugged, tinder-dry landscape with explosive speed,
the springtime conflagration has displaced thousands of residents while
raising fears that the entire American Southwest was in for a long,
brutal fire season.
As smoke hung heavy outside Angel Fire's supermarket, Almeada Martinson
said she planned to pack her photos, guns, two dogs and cat, then
evacuate to Taos, 17 miles to the west.
"I'm totally anxious and terrified. This is my home," said Martinson,
35, general manager of a construction business, as ash swirled around
her feet.
The Sangre de Cristo mountains, soaring to over 13,000 feet, have
traditionally seen spring storms dumping more than 2 feet of snow. But
climate change has diminished the snowpack and brought summer-like
temperatures earlier in the year, biologists say, drying out the region
and leaving communities more vulnerable to fire.
At Angel Fire's airstrip, strong winds grounded firefighting
helicopters. Seven miles to the south at Black Lake, firefighters
huddled around a map and discussed which properties they could try to
save.
In immediate danger was the village of Chacon, where locals faced flames
on two sides after they stayed behind to defend centuries-old ranches,
firefighters said.
To the north, residents of Taos Canyon cut down their own trees to
create fire buffers around homes. About 4 miles farther west of downtown
Taos - the heart of an area inhabited by indigenous people for 1,000
years - residents were advised to be ready to evacuate on short notice.
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Smoke casts an orange haze as firefighters hold a briefing in the
Black Lake, New Mexico area north of the Calf Canyon Hermits Peak
wildfire, U.S., May 11, 2022. REUTERS/Andrew Hay
At a news briefing late in the day, however,
battalion fire chief Todd Abel said the leading edge of the blaze
appeared to be heading more toward the north and east, in a
direction that would hopefully skirt Taos, a town of about 5,700
people.
In another piece of good news, authorities said mandatory evacuation
orders were being lifted on Wednesday evening for a string of small
Mora County communities, though other populated areas on the
northern edge of the blaze were newly threatened.
Although unseasonably warm temperatures and extreme
low humidity will persist in the days ahead, winds that have howled
with gale-force strength for nearly a week are expected to subside
on Friday, giving firefighters a bit of a respite, forecasters said.
The blaze, dubbed the Hermits Peak/Calf Canyon fire, has burned over
236,939 acres (95,885 hectares) of land, an area larger than all
five boroughs of New York City, with containment lines carved around
about a third of its perimeter as of Wednesday evening.
The fire grew out of two blazes that ignited about two weeks apart
and later merged into one, the first originating from a
prescribed-burn project that ran out of control, according to fire
officials. The cause of the second remained under investigation.
In addition to climate change, a century of strict fire suppression
and court bans on logging since the 1990s have helped transform New
Mexico's northern forests into overgrown, highly combustible fuel
beds, scientists say.
(Reporting by Andrew Hay; Additional reporting by Steve Gorman;
editing by Donna Bryson, David Gregorio, Leslie Adler & Simon
Cameron-Moore)
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