Prescribed burn in Jemez Mountains spreads smoke to nearby areas
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. — You can expect to see more smoke coming from the direction of the Jemez Mountains as crews work on the North Joaquin Prescribed Fire project.
That smoke rolled into the Albuquerque metro Friday morning, likely causing you to cough or clear your throat, and officials to prompt an air quality alert until 11 a.m.
Santa Fe National Forest crews burned around 700 acres Thursday in an area about six miles west of Jemez Springs and three miles south of the Rancho de Chaparral Girl Scout Camp.
There are around 1,000 acres left to burn. Crews will keep burning through Saturday, then transition to securing and holding the fire within the lines.
In the meantime, they will temporarily close forest roads in the area. They expect the project to last five days.
What does the weather look like for these burns? Meteorologist Kira Miner has a look at that in her full forecast:
Meteorologist Kira Miner shares all the details in her full forecast in the video above.
MORE:
- For the latest conditions, click here
- Find weather alerts here
- Check out the interactive radar
- Submit photos and videos