DALLAS (AP) — An overnight thunderstorm gave crews the break they needed to begin containing a wildfire that has scorched about 110 square miles of rolling prairies in northern Texas, while firefighters redoubled their efforts to battle blazes that destroyed dozens of homes in the west of the state, an official said Monday.
The storm brought cooler temperatures and some rain to parts of the drought-stricken state, giving fire crews added time to dig trenches and burn brush to choke off the blaze ignited accidentally Wednesday by a welder’s torch near Swenson, 175 miles west of Fort Worth, Texas Forest Service spokesman Alan Craft said. He said the fire was 50 percent contained as of Monday morning.
That blaze was among the largest wildfires that have scorched some 480 square miles throughout the parched state in the past week.
Firefighters also were battling a blaze that destroyed 40 homes in the West Texas town of Fort Davis over the weekend before racing into the largely unpopulated wilderness to the north and east. Mr. Craft said that fire, which has burned about 94 square miles of Jeff Davis County, wasn’t threatening any other homes as of Monday morning.
Residents described the terror of watching the advance of the fast-moving wall of flame.
“It was unbelievable, just horrific. There were horses on fire, buildings on fire, houses on fire,” said Bob Dillard, a former Jeff Davis County judge and editor of the weekly Jeff Davis County Mountain Dispatch.
Revis Daggett, co-owner of Wayside Inn B&B in Fort Davis, called the situation “gut-wrenching.”
“It’s very personal, and it’s quite surreal,” said Mr. Daggett, whose business had not been burned as of Sunday afternoon. “And you look around and you just keep thinking, ’Well, you can’t control the fire, so what are the possibilities it comes back at you?’”
Another West Texas fire burned 25 square miles in Midland County and destroyed about 34 homes, Mr. Craft said Sunday.
The northern Texas fire hasn’t destroyed any homes because it was in a rural area of rolling plains, Mr. Craft said.
A huge swath of Middle America, stretching from the Louisiana Gulf to Colorado, is experiencing drought conditions, which are worsening, according to the U.S. Drought Monitor, which tracks such conditions. As of the group’s April 5 update, 60 percent of Texas, including all of West Texas and much of Central Texas, was listed as in extreme drought, up from 43 percent the week before. About 5 percent of Texas — an area in the southeast of the state — was classified as in exceptional drought, the most severe category.
The Federal Emergency Management Agency was expected to respond to some of the state’s massive fires, assisting volunteer and other fire departments from across Texas and two dozen other states, Mr. Craft said.
Sunday’s hot, windy conditions and low humidity, combined with withered shrubs and grasses caused by the drought, made for dangerous conditions, Mr. Craft said. Air tankers usually used to douse such massive fires could not be flown Sunday because of wind gusts of 40 to 50 mph, Mr. Craft said.
Mr. Craft said Monday that the high fire danger was expected to persist across the northern and western parts of Texas because of low humidity, high temperatures, strong wind and dry conditions.
National Weather Service meteorologist Jason Dunn said temperatures in North Texas will be in the 70s Monday and will climb into the 80s later in the week. South Texas was expected to get temperatures around 90 degrees on Monday, and highs in the upper 80s were expected for the rest of the week.
Mr. Dunn added that even though parts of North Texas got rain from storms overnight, it was only a few inches.
“As soon as the sun comes out and the winds come up, the moisture has little effect,” Mr. Craft said.
In the Texas Panhandle, a wildfire scorched more than 90 square miles of Potter and Moore counties. A fire that burned more than 15 square miles of land in Garza County, south of Lubbock, has been mostly contained Sunday, fire officials said.
Some small fires were reported Sunday in East Texas, including a 129-acre Angelina County fire that was contained.
Associated Press writer Angela K. Brown in Fort Worth and broadcast anchor Ed Donahue in Washington also contributed to this report.
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