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Arizona Wildfire Triggers New Evacuation Orders (VIDEO)

AP/The Huffington Post  
First Posted: 06/06/11 09:50 AM ET Updated: 08/06/11 06:12 AM ET

GREER, Ariz. -- More than 2,000 firefighters from several states battled a 287-square-mile wildfire in eastern Arizona that forced the evacuation of mountain communities and the closure of roads and a key highway as it burned its way through dry timber and brush.

Fire officials said late Sunday night that the blaze expanded by several thousand acres during the day and had reached 184,000 acres, the third largest in the state's history.

WATCH:

About 2,300 firefighters are in the scene, including many from several western states and as far away as New York, fire information officer Peter Frenzen said.

Crews have been converging on the fire site, 160 miles east of Phoenix, since it erupted nine days ago but so far there is zero containment.

In the vacation town of Greer, which has fewer than 200 year-round residents, many people have voluntarily left. Those who remained, mostly business owners, dealt with haze heavily tinged with smoke. Among them was the owner of the 101-year-old Molly Butler Lodge, who was hauling out his most valuable items.

Allan Johnson spent Sunday morning getting antiques, including an 1886 table brought by covered wagon from Utah and a 1928 Oldsmobile the lodge uses for weddings, out of the fire's path. He said he was not taking reservations but was keeping the restaurant open, mainly as a meeting place.

Greer is within miles of the fire, which officials expect will grow given a windy forecast and expected dry lightning Monday. If the blaze comes within two miles of a containment line nearby, the town will be evacuated.

"We're all waiting for the word," Johnson said. "It could be 24 hours, could be eight hours. It might not happen at all - that's what we're all rooting and praying for."

The Apache County sheriff's office told an unknown number of people east of the town of Alpine along U.S. Highway 180 to get out as the forest fire crept closer.

Alpine itself has been under mandatory evacuation orders since Thursday night, along with the community of Nutrioso and several lodges and camps in the scenic high country.

The fire and heavy smoke creating pea-soup visibility forced the closure of several area roads, including about a two-mile stretch of Highway 180 between Alpine and the New Mexico line, Frenzen said.

Officials said subdivisions close to the border that were ordered emptied Sunday included Escudilla Mountain Estates, Bonita, Dog Patch, and the H-V Ranch east of Highway 180.

People packed up their belongings as smoke covered the mountain vacation towns in a smoky fog, and wind blew smoke from the burning pine forest well into nearby New Mexico and Colorado.

As winds quieted somewhat Sunday, crews were able to burn 30 miles of containment lines between active and unburned areas that create a buffer from the most violent wind-driven runs.

"It gives a much greater chance of it having diminished fire behavior as it approaches the lines," Frenzen told The Associated Press. "And that's the concern, that you might get intense fire activity that might throw embers over the line and spot beyond our control lines."

On Saturday, Gov. Jan Brewer called the blaze "horrific" following an aerial tour and said it was "the likes of a fire of which I have never experienced from the air."

Since the blaze started May 29, four summer rental cabins have been destroyed, the U.S. Forest Service said. No serious injuries have been reported.

The fire is the state's third-largest, behind a 2002 blaze that blackened more than 732 square miles and one in 2005 that burned about 387 square miles in the Phoenix suburb of Cave Creek.

The state also was contending with another major wildfire, its fifth-largest, in far southeastern Arizona that threatened two communities.

Air crews dumped water and retardant near the Methodist church camp as the 156-square-mile blaze burned around the evacuated camp in the steep Pine Canyon near the community of Paradise.

Paradise, as well as East Whitetail Canyon, was evacuated in advance and the nearby Chiricahua National Monument was closed as a precaution. Crews set backfires and kept the blaze from about a dozen occupied homes and other vacation residences.

Two summer cabins and four outbuildings were consumed by flames in recent days but weren't reported earlier because crews couldn't reach them to assess damage, fire management spokeswoman Karen Ripley said late Sunday night.

She said that the 100,000-acre fire held steady throughout Sunday.

"They did quite well in holding the fire today."

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GREER, Ariz. -- More than 2,000 firefighters from several states battled a 287-square-mile wildfire in eastern Arizona that forced the evacuation of mountain communities and the closure of roads and a...
GREER, Ariz. -- More than 2,000 firefighters from several states battled a 287-square-mile wildfire in eastern Arizona that forced the evacuation of mountain communities and the closure of roads and a...
GREER, Ariz. -- More than 2,000 firefighters from several states battled a 287-square-mile wildfire in eastern Arizona that forced the evacuation of mountain communities and the closure of roads and a...
GREER, Ariz. -- More than 2,000 firefighters from several states battled a 287-square-mile wildfire in eastern Arizona that forced the evacuation of mountain communities and the closure of roads and a...
 
 
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12:29 AM on 06/07/2011
Again, our wilderness firefighters deserve our respect, but I've got the names of those who have quit the FS for the reasons discussed below.

I'm getting fanned unusually. Thanks, but I'd rather hear what you have to say. This is a big deal so please speak up.
12:11 AM on 06/07/2011
I'll keep beating this drum if it's useful. I went out to ground zero of the Hardy fire, saw 3 firefighters who were there WAY too early and basically said that they either started or enhanced the fire that was there. The peculiar response from the youngest of the 3 was: "how do you know?" as if to test what I'd deduced.
11:40 PM on 06/06/2011
OK, the very bottom line here is there is a big financial incentive for letting a little, containable fire become a big, crazy fire that gets Federal attention and money. Period. I can't abstract this any further.
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Rasebiho
You're getting tea. Do you want sugar or lemon?
11:39 PM on 06/06/2011
There was a chance the Wallow fire could have been smaller, but the timber business in the White Mountains is tiny compared to what it was in the past. About a dozen sawmills have closed in the last twenty years.

Tree cutting permits are nearly impossible to come by, because they are challenged in court by environmentalists. Mostly by the Center for Biological Diversity.

Imagine, private businesses would have paid the Forest Service for the rights to cut fire breaks and clear underbrush. Can't have that.
12:33 AM on 06/07/2011
Hence the demand for "salvage" logging, or logging that follows a fire of some sort. A bit of collusion. If you're in the White Mountains, talk to Ron Miller about this. FS and fire guy who knows the ropes.
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Chaucea
Think of the otters!
11:19 PM on 06/06/2011
If you go to the Fire Service site for MODIS Daily imaging (http://activefiremaps.fs.fed.us/imagery.php), you can click on the state of Arizona and see the fire plume, then click on New Mexico and see the fire plume travel over from Arizona and up through New Mexico, and then click on Colorado to see the fire plume travel up from New Mexico, go north through Colorado and then head east into Kansas.

We've had intense, blood-orange sunsets the last few days here in northern Colorado from that Arizona fire smoke plume, with the whole sky a murky haze and the color of the sunlight throughout the day as an eerie mustard-yellow.
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rambot02
A modest proposal...
01:16 AM on 06/07/2011
I live in So. Cal and the same eerie skies happen when we have bad wild fires, but the most intense sunsets I've even seen came in June, 1991 several days after Mt. Pinatubo erupted in the Philippines and lasted (in diminishing degree) for almost a month. The skies were ablaze -- blood orange is the perfect phrase -- and undeniably beautiful but in an eerie, almost sad, way since I knew that the striking sunsets I was enjoying came at the expense of thousands of evacuees and almost 500 human casualties.
11:07 PM on 06/06/2011
I used to host Hot Shot crews on my property. My wife and I kept them fed and rested. Good folks all around. BUT, they are the first to tell anyone who will listen that there is a significant level of "massaging" any fire event. The purpose being to insure employment and trigger Federal funding. Fine, bring on the big resources I say, but we are getting awfully close to the point where fires of opportunity are created as a mechanism for full FS employment.
09:55 PM on 06/06/2011
The sun was bright red late this afternoon.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Roadrun
Question Authority
09:35 PM on 06/06/2011
Was in Taos New Mexico today and the sky wasn't blue, it was white with that smoke. Now I am in Albuquerque and visibility is less than a mile. Smells like the fire is a block away and it burns eyes to be outside. What am I saying, my eyes are burning now and I am inside.

This is a BIG fire and it is forest that is burning. Believe it or not that forest and the animals know nothing about any state lines.

Drought and extreme fires in some areas, flooding and tornadoes in other areas, extreme winter storms and hottest summers on record way up north. Good thing there isn't any global warming because they say it would cost a lot to try and reverse if there was. This is much cheaper. When is hurricane season? I hear the gulf is pretty warm this year.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
tjconkster
Occupy the Voting Booth 2012!
10:48 PM on 06/06/2011
You should be up here in the East Mountains...I can't see the Sandia's to the west or South Mountain to the East...and I live in between....I called a friend in the ABQ to be sure that the smoke was there too...up here it looks and smells like the fire is in my backyard...
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12:15 AM on 06/07/2011
Are you closer to Madrid or Tijeras? I'm out of state helping with my parents for a bit,
but friends say ABQ is really smoggy and smokey. I hope it isn't running my hummingbirds off.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Roadrun
Question Authority
07:29 AM on 06/07/2011
Last week I was in Zuni we got it, and Grants and it was the same. Depends on which way the wind is blowing on a given day. What was very uncomfortable was driving from Zuni to Grants in the forest (near El Moro or the Ice Caves) with that smell and smoke. I knew where it was coming from but my brain kept saying it was closer.
09:35 PM on 06/06/2011
These type of fires are normal.
Still feel bad for those who live there.
Old timers keep the brush cut far way from their home....hope that works for them.
Some pine cones/trees only seed from a fire.
Air quality is awful too....
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Roadrun
Question Authority
07:37 AM on 06/07/2011
It's not normal. There was no snow last winter and there isn't a bit of runoff this year. It's been a long time since there was an appreciable amount of rain. Forests are bone dry and it takes nothing to have a camp fire or lightening fire take off. More than a few National Forests are closed, and will remain that way until there is a semblance of rain.

This isn't normal, it's a bad drought.
10:25 AM on 06/07/2011
Oh dear, I did not mean this big of a fire is normal.
I meant that the forests do burn as a part of the normal cycle.
Please, don't think that I was being 'hard hearted.'
We are in the middle of a bad drought too. See those poor people who are loosing everything in a flood and just wish we could have some of that water.....
We are trying to go camping this summer and are very aware of the forest closings.
This comment has been removed due to violations of our [Guidelines]
08:58 PM on 06/06/2011
Always in Arizona and always out of control. Do we not see a pattern here people? I live here and hold my breath every time the Forest service announces a "prescribed" burn or sends scout trucks into the woods behind my house for no apparent reason, or cannot seem to respond to a small fire that all of us have been watching for hours (See Parks Arizona), until it is big enough to be a danger.
09:37 PM on 06/06/2011
actually NM has a bunch too.....we just don't ge tthe coverage....not so many people here....
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
tjconkster
Occupy the Voting Booth 2012!
10:50 PM on 06/06/2011
Yeah..in a way it makes me mad that we don't get the coverage....but..on the other hand its kinda nice....
11:34 PM on 06/06/2011
Well, to be more clear, it is the same fire fighting division and mechanism. NM FS field management is the same only less publicized as you say. It's about staffing, plain and simple.
08:55 PM on 06/06/2011
This is when we see REAL Americans helping other Americans. Firefighters from California (as well as other western states) over fighting to help Arizona residents -- just like Arizona firefighters come to California to help fight our major wildfires to help California residents. Both cases are examples of REAL "real Americans" coming together to solve a problem regardless of political leanings. Not the politically devisive garbage talk that politicians and extremists throw around.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
William Brock
08:37 PM on 06/06/2011
Arizona better go to the Mexican border, fall on their knees and beg the Illegal Immigrants to come and clean up their mess......
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
keep it solid
Have a great day :)
06:40 PM on 06/06/2011
stay safe folks
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
judibluiz
Life I love you...all is groovy
04:48 PM on 06/06/2011
Here in Northern Colorado we've had the haze from the AZ wildfires for two days. Last night as the moon was setting over the mountains, it was bright orange and you could smell the smoke. I read in the newspaper this morning that visibility is down to a few feet in some communities -- I hope they get everyone out with respiratory problems.

To the firefighters and citizens of AZ stay safe. We hold you in our thoughts -- A Coloradoan