N.M. wildfires force evacuations of homes

? Residents were allowed to return to their southwestern New Mexico homes briefly Saturday as fire crews continued to battle a wildfire that had forced an evacuation two days earlier.

Pinon, juniper and ponderosa pine trees are fueling the lightning-caused fire that has charred 8,535 acres since it was first reported June 2 in the Gila National Forest.

More than 200 homes in the Lake Roberts area were evacuated Thursday after wind gusts of about 40 mph pushed the blaze over a hand-cleared line. No homes have been damaged.

Authorities organized a convoy to allow residents back in for two hours Saturday to take care of anything they didn’t get to do before, said Shayna Carney, a fire information officer with the U.S. Forest Service.

Evacuees are being housed at San Lorenzo School in Mimbres.

South of Albuquerque, firefighters mopped up after a 150-acre blaze that temporarily shut down Interstate 25 and forced the evacuation of about 30 homes.

State Forestry Division spokesman Dan Ware said smoke and flames were still visible Saturday, but crews expected to have the fire fully contained by evening.

A plane drops fire retardant on a fire in Cory Canyon in Washoe Valley, Nev. Wildfires burned in recent days in New Mexico, Arizona, Colorado, Alaska, Utah and Texas.

The fire was human-caused and is under investigation, Ware said.

Lightning sparked 23 wildfires in northeastern New Mexico this week, all burning in remote areas. All but four of those fires were contained Saturday and the rest were 80 percent contained.

Along the Utah-Arizona border, crews were mopping up a fire on the Navajo Mountain. The 3,350-acre blaze was 45 percent contained Saturday and posed no threat to homes, said fire information officer Jim Whittington.

Residents of about 1,000 homes in Flagstaff, Ariz., were allowed to return Thursday, a day after they were evacuated as wind pushed flames from a pine forest toward them. The 120-acre fire crept within feet of a half-dozen houses, but crews managed to save all of them.

In northern Arizona near the Grand Canyon, three lightning-triggered wildfires burned a collective total of 2,515 acres, Kaibab National Forest officials said. The fires were allowed to burn because they are not threatening any property and remained within boundaries established by fire managers.

In southern Colorado, all 100 people who left their homes near a 700-acre fire were given the all-clear to return late Thursday. The fire, near Westcliffe about 100 miles south of Denver, was 50 percent contained.

Wildfires also burned in Alaska, Utah and Texas.