ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. ? Heavy snow from a winter storm blanketed parts of the West on Friday, stranding motorists throughout New Mexico and delaying holiday travelers trying to fly in and out of Albuquerque and Denver.
The snow and high winds struck the region Thursday and forced dozens of drivers off Interstate 40 after severe conditions made driving in western New Mexico nearly impossible.
"If you don't have (four-wheel drive) and you just have two-wheel ... you're either going to spin or stay stuck," stranded motorist Tarquin Wilding told KOAT-TV while in Grants, N.M., on his way to Santa Fe.
Grants and parts of western New Mexico were slammed with more than a foot of snow by Friday morning, the National Weather Service reported. A winter storm warning for the state expired in the afternoon, but meteorologists said the snow wasn't expected to clear up until the weekend.
Some parts of the state saw 17 inches of snow as state and local police responded to dozens of minor accidents. No major injuries were reported.
The New Mexico Department of Transportation closed parts of I-40 around Albuquerque and in eastern New Mexico because of poor driving conditions due to ice and heavy winds. State officials reopened the most of highway Friday afternoon.
Large portions of I-25 from Truth or Consequences to Las Cruces, and I-10 in western New Mexico also were closed, and authorities were urging motorists to seek shelter in hotels.
In El Paso, Texas, on Friday, a few inches of snow covered roads and yards Friday morning. Some sections of I-10 in the western part of the state were reduced to one lane as officers responded to a rash of accidents.
"We're seeing a lot of ice on the roads," said El Paso police spokesman Darrel Petry.
Snowfall was forecast for other West Texas cities and the central portion of the state by early Saturday. Houston, the Dallas-Fort Worth area and South Texas were expected to get rain on Christmas Eve.
In Rio Rancho, N.M., Police Officer Charles Ritter turned away motorist after motorist along U.S. 550, telling them that much of northwestern New Mexico had been shuttered by the storm.
"It's for their own safety," he said after one woman pleaded unsuccessfully to get past the roadblock so she could get to her father's home in Colorado.
Brian Shoemaker, of Albuquerque, was stuck in the line of motorists at the roadblock. He was heading to Colorado to spend Christmas with his family and unhappy to learn it would be early afternoon before he could drive again.
"Some places in Albuquerque it was horrible, and some places it was great. It's just real spotty," he said. "You'll move from good to bad within two-, three-mile sections."
Jim Hunsaker, a Union Pacific Railroad employee, had even farther to go. He hoped to get home to Salt Lake City, Utah, before Christmas Eve after spending several days working in New Mexico.
"It's mindboggling that they even close these roads. In Utah, this isn't nothing," he said of the conditions Friday morning. "We travel in conditions like this all the time, so it's kind of frustrating they've got me shut down here."
Caren Cowan, executive director of the New Mexico Cattle Growers' Association, said ranchers near Vaughn, N.M., sheltered a number of stranded travelers Thursday evening after heavy snow made roads in east-central New Mexico impassable. Ranchers also took precautions to protect livestock in rural areas in case snow drifts froze and trapped cattle away from unfrozen water.
In Colorado, operations at the Denver International Airport were getting back to normal after a storm that brought about 10 inches of snow. However, airport officials say passengers flying out Friday morning would still have deicing delays of about 25 minutes after leaving their gates.
About 100 flights were canceled at the Denver airport on Thursday because of the snow. A piece of snow removal equipment also struck a jet parked at a gate, forcing passengers on a Southwest Airlines flight to Los Angeles to switch to another plane.
Daniel Jiron, a spokesman for Albuquerque International Sunport, said the airport was seeing fewer delays Friday as conditions improved.
"We've had delays here and there but otherwise we're in good shape," Jiron said.
Anchorage, Alaska, got up to 14 inches of snow early Friday, but Alaska Airlines, the major carrier at Ted Stevens Anchorage International Airport, only had minor delays.
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Follow Russell Contreras on Twitter at http://twitter.com/russcontreras. Associated Press writers Susan Montoya Bryan in Rio Rancho, N.M., Juan A. Lozano in Houston, and Mark Thiessen in Anchorage, Alaska, contributed to this report.
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