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A weary Wally Barraza, an assistant trainer at Red Oak Stables, waits for more horses to arrive Wednesday after working all night evacuating racehorses to Albuquerque Downs from Ruidoso Downs. The village of Ruidoso was evacuated Monday.

ALBUQUERQUE — As the smell of smoke hit the Ruidoso Downs stables where Enrique Gomez stayed Monday and Tuesday nights, he heard some of the horses start to scream.

“They don’t like the fire,†said Gomez, an Albuquerque resident who works for well-known racehorse trainer Rafael Barraza in Ruidoso Downs during the racing season. “They want to jump and get out of the smoke.â€

Gomez and a number of other helpers, grooms and trainers stayed at the stables with the horses they were caring for as residents of nearby Ruidoso streamed out, fleeing the fast-moving South Fork and Salt fires that had both ignited Monday.

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Assistant trainer Wally Barraza, left, and groom Trinidad Guzman with Red Oak Stables of Phoenix get their horses settled in at Albuquerque Downs as they wait for more horses to arrive Wednesday. 

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Horse groom Trinidad Guzman with Red Oak Stables of Phoenix feeds one of the stables' best racers, True Secret, a grassy treat as he waits for more horses to arrive. He had worked all night to evacuate the racehorses to the Albuquerque Downs from Ruidoso Downs on Wednesday. 

Dog found in Alto Ruidoso fire

A dog found by law enforcement in the Alto area Wednesday morning and brought to the Humane Society of Lincoln County in Ruidoso. Shelter manager Chris Shows said the dog, a male Great Pyrenees mix without any tags, was sitting outside a burned-down house, which officials suspect may have been his home.

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Staffers Martín Olivera and Juan Carlos Garcia of Española Humane accept animals evacuated from Ruidoso because of the South Fork and Salt wildfires.



New Mexican reporter Scott Wyland contributed to this story.

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