RINGGOLD, Texas (AP) – Firefighters faced a threat of windier, warmer weather Tuesday as they battled fast-moving blazes that have virtually destroyed some small towns and charred hundreds of thousands of acres of drought-stricken Texas, Oklahoma and New Mexico.

Since Dec. 27, fires across grassland and farmland have destroyed more than 250 buildings. Four deaths were reported last week in Texas and Oklahoma.

On Monday, authorities went house to house in a search for victims in burned-out Texas towns including Ringgold. A weekend blaze destroyed most of the ranch-and-cattle community of about 100 people near the Oklahoma line. Fifty other homes and 40,000 acres were torched as wind swept the fire 13 miles from Ringgold to Nocona.

Coylee Grimsley and her two sons watched their home burn just hours after she had cooked a large meal to celebrate the new year.

“We was enjoying it, and here come the flames,” she said. “If you’d been there, you’d have thought the world was going to end.”

One of two major fires near San Angelo in West Texas – a 40,000-acre blaze in Sterling County – had been contained, authorities said. Fifteen structures were destroyed and two people suffered minor injuries.

The other major blaze in the San Angelo area, a 50,000-acre fire with a 50-mile perimeter in nearby Irion and Reagan counties, was about 70 percent contained Tuesday. No damages or evacuations were reported.

A 35,000-acre blaze near the small towns of Carbon, Gorman and Desdemona had been beaten back by late Monday to just a few hundred acres of mostly open ranch land, said Mark Pipkin of the Eastland Fire Department.

All major wildfires in Oklahoma were declared under control late Monday thanks to calmer wind and higher humidity, but crews were preparing for the worst. Highs up to 80 were possible Tuesday with only 10 to 20 percent humidity and wind up to 25 mph, the National Weather Service said.

“We will make sure that all the hot spots and smoldering areas are put out for the simple fact that if the wind picks up, we’ll be in trouble,” said Dan Ware, spokesman for New Mexico’s state Forestry Division.

The weather service issued a “red flag warning” for Texas on Tuesday because of the expected heat, low humidity and wind.

Computer models showed no rain soon, said Jesse Moore, a National Weather Service meteorologist in Fort Worth. He said the region’s last appreciable rain was about a quarter-inch on Dec. 20. Oklahoma is more than a foot behind its normal rainfall of about 36 inches for this time of year.

“We’re not out of danger yet,” said Oklahoma Gov. Brad Henry. “We can’t let our guard down.”

Since the rash of wildfires began in Texas, more than 200,000 acres of land has been charred, 250 homes destroyed and three people killed, the Texas Forest Service says.

Four fires in southeastern New Mexico had blackened more than 53,000 acres of grassland and burned 11 houses and two businesses near Hobbs.

The flames forced the evacuation of 200 to 300 people on the city’s fringe – including about 170 from two Hobbs nursing homes. All but about 50 had returned home by midday Monday, authorities said.

Since Nov. 1, Oklahoma wildfires have covered more than 331,000 acres and destroyed 220 homes and businesses, said Albert Ashwood, Oklahoma’s emergency management director. One person was killed.

With his grandparents’ Oklahoma City home in smoldering ruins, 10-year-old Cameron Batson found something to be thankful for: He pointed out the basketball goal in the driveway that remained intact after the three-level brick home was turned into ashen rubble.

“We had some good times here,” the boy said Monday, his voice cracking with emotion. “It was a pretty house.”



Associated Press writers Angela K. Brown in Kokomo, Texas, and Sean Murphy in Oklahoma City contributed to this report.

AP-ES-01-03-06 1518EST

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