10 June 2012

Fortunately far away

Rico says that he and the ladyfriend will be going to Santa Fe for a few days, but the fires are a couple of hundred miles away in southern New Mexico, as the Associated Press explains in the Philadelphia Inquirer:
Crews in Colorado and New Mexico battled wildfires that were moving fast through parched forests, forcing scores of evacuations and destroying or damaging numerous structures. A blaze in northern Colorado was first reported Saturday morning and had grown to at least eight thousand acres by Sunday morning, while a fire in southern New Mexico was small for a few days until it began growing Friday, reaching about ten thousand acres.
Both fires have damaged property and forced numerous evacuations, but officials haven't yet released specific figures on the numbers who fled.
Larimer County Sheriff's Office spokesman John Schulz said the Colorado wildfire, burning in the mountainous Paradise Park area about fifteen miles west of Fort Collins, expanded rapidly during the late afternoon and evening. By Saturday night, residents living along several roads in the region had been ordered to evacuate and many more were warned that they might have to flee. An evacuation center has been set up at a Laporte middle school.
Officials didn't specify how many residents had evacuated but said they had sent out more than fifteen hundred emergency notifications urging people to be prepared to evacuate if necessary. Law officers went door to door to alert people in the evacuation area, but officials were worried that not everyone got the word.
At least eighteen structures have been destroyed or damaged, although authorities were unsure if they were homes or some other kind of buildings. No injuries have been reported, and the cause of the fire was unknown.
Authorities say it's the worst fire seen in the county in about 25 years. It spread as fast as one to one-and-a-half miles an hour Saturday, skipping and jumping over some areas but burning intensely in trees in others. Flames were coming dangerously close to deputies who were telling some residents to evacuate, Sheriff Justin Smith said.
Because of the erratic way the fire has burned, unburned structures within the fire perimeter remain at risk. Aerial footage from KMGH on Saturday showed flames destroying what appeared to be several outbuildings and at least one home in the area, as well as consuming trees and sending a large plume of smoke into the air.
The Federal Emergency Management Agency said it was authorizing federal funds to help pay for firefighting efforts. Four air tankers and several helicopters were on the scene to help fight the blaze, which appeared to be burning on private and Forest Service land and was expected to be fueled by wind gusts of up forty mph on Sunday.
Wind was also playing a major role in the expansion of a lightning-sparked blaze in New Mexico's Lincoln National Forest that jumped its containment lines and raced through thick conifer forests. Fire managers said twenty structures were damaged or destroyed.
Spanning only a few acres on Wednesday, the Little Bear fire began to grow Friday and, by Saturday afternoon, about ten thousand acres had been charred northwest of the mountain community of Ruidoso.
"It's nerve-racking right now," Mayor Ray Alborn said in a telephone interview, as he watched what he described as "real heavy smoke" rise from the Sierra Blanca mountain range. The mix of timber, dry grass and the steepness of the slopes were making the firefighting efforts more difficult. Windy conditions were also limiting what could be done from the air by helicopters and air tankers, Alborn said.
Fire information officers said summer homes in a few subdivisions and several campgrounds were evacuated late Friday, and more on homes on Saturday. Roads throughout the area were closed, said forest spokeswoman Peg Crim.
The fire was burning in steep, rocky, inaccessible terrain in the White Mountain Wilderness of the Lincoln National Forest, which is home to Smokey Bear, the little black cub that became the nation's symbol of fire prevention in the 1940s.
Representative Steve Pearce, a Republican from New Mexico, said decades of mismanagement, forests packed full of trees, and persistent drought conditions have resulted in an explosive situation. "We just can't keep managing our forests this way," he said. "It's not a question of if our forests in the West are going to burn, it's a matter of when. This is just one more demonstration of that."

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