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    Wednesday, May 01, 2024

    Arizona fire burns summer cabins, forces evacuations

    Backed by a downtown skyline obscured by smoke from an Arizona wildfire, Ross Aranda takes Hombre for a morning walk in Pat Hurley Park on the west side of Albuquerque, N.M., on Friday.

    Tucson, Ariz. (AP) - One of the largest wildfires in Arizona history is torching cabins, forcing people to flee in the middle of the night and sending smoke 200 miles away, as other fires burned in several Western states that did not immediately threaten any buildings.

    The U.S. Forest Service said Friday at least three summer rental cabins burned in the Wallow wildfire that was consuming dead and dry trees and brush in the White Mountains near the New Mexico border.

    "There were some cabins, I believe up by Beaver Creek, that were burned," said Bill Bishop, a spokesman for the Eastern Arizona Incident Management Team, in an interview with The Associated Press.

    The Central Arizona Chapter of the American Red Cross said between three and six cabins burned along with one mobile home according to the Apache County Emergency Services.

    "There's one mobile home in Alpine and six homes in Beaver Creek," said Mark Weldon, a Red Cross spokesman in Phoenix.

    The U.S. Forest Service said the Wallow fire has burned 165 square miles making it the fourth-largest wildfire in state history.

    The Rodeo-Chediski fire burned 469,000 acres in 2002, the Cave Creek complex fire burned 248,000 acres in 2005, and the Willow fire burned 120,000 acres in 2004.

    Residents in the scenic mountain community of Alpine were ordered Thursday night to pack up and leave.

    A shelter was set up at Blue Ridge High School in Pinetop-Lakeside. There was no exact figure on the number of evacuees.

    Smoke from the Alpine fire is carrying all the way to Albuquerque, N.M., more than 200 miles to the northeast.

    The evacuation order for Paradise and East Whitetail Canyon in southeastern Arizona went out Thursday night as strong winds pushed the so-called Horseshoe Two fire toward the towns, the Cochise County Sheriff's office said.

    The nearby Chiricahua National Monument was closed as a precaution.

    The Horseshoe Two fire has been burning for days and has charred about 135 square miles (86,000 acres) of brush and timber. Officials said it had been 75 percent contained until the winds picked up, dropping containment down to 50 percent.

    Beaver Creek and the other two evacuated communities are small. Paradise has about a dozen occupied homes and many other vacation residences, Carol Capas, a spokeswoman for the Cochise County Sheriff's office, told The AP. East Whitetail Canyon has about a dozen homes.

    The U.S. Forest Service said about 800 firefighters are battling the blaze, and many are involved in protecting structures in the evacuated communities.

    Meanwhile, another wildfire burning in northern Arizona has burned about 100 acres near Camp Navajo, an Army National Guard Base west of Flagstaff.

    Nearby Interstate 40 remains open, but fire officials cautioned the highway could be closed because of the smoke.

    Near Silver City, N.M., firefighters were close to fully containing a wildfire that has charred about 140 square miles. In Colorado, calmer winds were expected Friday at a 20-acre fire that burned up a ridge to within 50 yards of homes near Keystone Resort. A wildfire burning about 50 miles east of Los Angeles in California's Cleveland National Forest was holding at 160 acres, but no homes were threatened. And in Alaska, crews fought a fire that had burned more than 8 acres along a ridge overlooking cabins and recreation homes northwest of Fairbanks.

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