Escaped the Flames! Images of how close the fire came to our home.

Yoder · 3753

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Offline Yoder

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On June 23, the wife and I took a trip out to San Francisco to be alone. This was a first vacation alone in 23 years...been raising a family. As we were boarding the plane my oldest daughter sent us some images showing a plume of smoke some miles behind where we live. Two days latter we received a frantic call from my daughter saying that there was a wall of fire coming towards the house. I was talking on another line to a friend who said the fire was some miles away from where I lived, but when I got back I talked to a neighbor who is with the CSFD. He said that he was up there when the flames came over the ridge and that is was a few miles from us, then a fire storm spawned and the flames started jumping the ridges. The flames were 100 to 200 feet high, street lights went on, and the flames consume everything in it path. The fireman said his was up there with others to contain the fire, but the ended up running for their lives.

Our neighborhood never received an official evacuation until 3 hours too late, fortunately my daughter followed the advice of those in the hood and evacuated with them. It was all she could do to get the pets, safe, important papers, and my Martin guitar out. Upon our return, a gracious friend put the wife and me up, along with the cats, for three days. Dolo stayed with her main squeeze and the dogs. My main concern was that I took just enough meds with me for the trip and a couple of days. Consequently, I was critically low (I am "permanently and totally disabled with service connection.") They were letting some in who lived in certain parts, but our development seems to be lost in the grand scheme. We took a chance and I explained my situation, flashed my military ID, and they eventually let us in. We had access to the entire burn area.

I was there when Mt St. Helens blew, but what we saw here humbled me even more. Many friends and associates of ours had their homes reduced to piles of ash. The fire came within four blocks or our home, but it did set an open space on fire directly behind us. They put this out very quickly. It was very upsetting to see the homes of people we knew, friends of our daughters destroyed so quickly. It has reduced me to an emotional mess. Days of not knowing if I would have a home, seeing friends loose everything, etc, etc, etc. We have been finding ashes in our backyard the size of dollar bills, and everything has a fine coating of soot on it. We thought we would have smoke damage, but we came out rather well. The interior of the house has zero odor, and no ashes in it.

The good news is that last night we received some heavy rains. It was a hot day, hitting about 97 degrees, but the rain was a god send. We no longer had a smoky odor about us, but a odor of having just doused a campfire with water. More rain is expected, and so now we have to worry about mud slides and flash floods. They suspect arson--so do I (the sky was clear the day the fire started.) There were also looters coming into the neighborhoods and just trashing homes (slitting furniture, knocking over book shelves, and just senselessly ransacking homes.) We were not hit, but I talked to a MP who was wearing his .45 semi, and he said that they had been chasing people off the ridge behind us.

Thankfully, all are safe, the home is intact, and only a couple of people up the street were murdered (fire from arson.) It could have been far worse. The city as a whole really was lucky, this fire could have been 5X as destructive had the winds continued. I tip my hat to the first responders. I saw home that the porches caught fire and they saved them, and there we many other such examples. I flew back with a couple of Hot Shots, and they said they were going to be doing 20/8 shifts...20 hours on and 8 off. Hey, even Obama walked our streets.

Below are some images taken from our hood. I did not take any of the photos, but just to give you an idea of what we were up against.

Below: Fire is moving in. You can read the street sign "Centennial", that is the street we live off of and a block from our home. This is just across the street where we live. A elementary school in on the left, and was used after the fire as a dump location. The white and green house that you see had it roof blown off a few months ago.

(https://forum.bottlehead.com/proxy.php?request=http%3A%2F%2Fco-bw.com%2FWaldo%2F4fea7de047222.image.jpg&hash=72793705d49f2d9284fae02691fa610f058d500f)

Below: About a mile from us.

(https://forum.bottlehead.com/proxy.php?request=http%3A%2F%2Fco-bw.com%2FWaldo%2F4fea7d7481842.image.jpg&hash=7489bd31909aff876d090275a0c0bd5d99fc1f59)

Below: Just up the street where many of our friends lived.

(https://forum.bottlehead.com/proxy.php?request=http%3A%2F%2Fco-bw.com%2FWaldo%2F241431_web_APTOPIX-Western-Wildf_Ball-1-.jpg&hash=d22ab6d0fd5e905a8244ba347c68854fdd1614dc)

Below: A few blocks south of us as the fire was moving in:

(https://forum.bottlehead.com/proxy.php?request=http%3A%2F%2Fco-bw.com%2FWaldo%2FWaldo-Canyon-Fire-in-Colorado-6.jpg&hash=9dfaa0b87c670b2edeb5912b42811ad7e7c17099)

Below: Just a small example of what it looks like if we go up the street a few blocks. It does not even begin to document the severity of the destruction.

(https://forum.bottlehead.com/proxy.php?request=http%3A%2F%2Fco-bw.com%2FWaldo%2FREU-OBAMA1.jpg&hash=3bbebdf37e25dc9e9e2952c29a5a7bcf602448df)



Offline Doc B.

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Wow, so glad you guys came out of this OK. The scale of the fire in those photos is almost beyond comprehension.

Dan "Doc B." Schmalle
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Offline Noskipallwd

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Yoder, glad to hear you and yours are OK. I live east of Fountain so our property was never in danger. I work in the Hospital in Woodland Park and was stuck there for most of my work week. I remember the day it all went bad, the fire was around 5 miles from the Hospital, we had already evacuated our patients. I went to sleep and woke up to news that the fire had jumped Queens canyon and was already into Mountain Shadows and Perrigren. I knew it was going to be bad. We are lucky there were only 2 'murders', the person responsible should pray that he is caught by law enforcement first. When Iwas younger I worked for Digital and lived just up the road from you, I thought for sure the fire was going to get to Centennial. Once again, glad you are OK!

Cheers,
Shawn

Shawn Prigmore


Offline John Roman

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Though I don't know you beyond the reach of this group, my heart goes out to you and your family. The images are horrifying. Family is everything, I'm so glad yours is safe.
Best regards,
John Roman
« Last Edit: July 05, 2012, 02:42:28 AM by John Roman »

Regards,
John
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Offline Laudanum

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Wow, just unbelievable destruction.  Glad to hear you and yours came out of it ok.   Hopefully they catch the arsonist or arsonists.  As far as the twisted, low life looters that take advantage and add to the destruction and devastation that the victims already have to deal with, they should just be shot on site.   If there is a hell, both the arsonists and the looters deserve no less than immediate relocation to it.  Sorry if that sounds harsh but the world would be better off without "people" like these.

Again, glad to hear you are ok and you didnt lose your home.

Desmond G.


Offline earwaxxer

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Yoder - thanks for sharing the photos and details. We were in Grand Lake vacationing at the time. Nothing there except for some smoke at times. These kind of things are hard to comprehend.

Eric
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Offline ironbut

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Good to hear that your house made it! Looks like it was touch and go.
Disasters like that really change everything and it might seem like things will never be back to "normal" sometimes. But they will in time. And some of that "community pulling together" which always seems to happen, will remain and enrich the future.
So, hang in there.

steve koto


Offline Chris

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Holy COW!... i agree with doc, almost beyond comprehension, the scale... incredible photos... same thing happened to my town of wenatchee years back, it was coming down off the hill, my dad was hosing off his house and waiting, but there were just so many firefighters and crew from many areas helping, it was like a military base camp , my fire chief uncle said. well the town got very lucky as the fires were put out before the town was hit... but your fire was just SO massive..wow glad your property and everyone is safe... my heart goes out to everyone who lost all their possessions....



Offline RayP

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Those of you who live in areas like this might like to take a look at the following link from the New South Wales Rural Fire Service in Australia. It contains a wealth of things to think about, particularly on preparation and making the very hard decision about when to leave (hint - leave early when it is easy to leave).

http://www.rfs.nsw.gov.au/file_system/attachments/Attachment_BushFireSurvivalPlan.pdf

Even if you don't live in a potentially dangerous area, it still is a very interesting document.

ray

Ray Perry


Offline Yoder

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Reply #9 on: July 06, 2012, 11:07:30 AM
Many thanks to all.

We are still trying to get back on our feet. Our home was spared, but there is a lot of clean up being done, and nerves that need settling. I saw a friend at the post office today who lost his entire home. Needless to say, everyone here is pretty stressed. I took a foot tour yesterday and took a few photos. What amazed us was that there was no sign of a fire and then an entire neighborhood would be gone. It was as if the flames just reached over and torched the place. The air is extremely toxic in the burned out areas. Here are a few photos that I took yesterday. They are large, so I posted more here: http://co-bw.com/waldo.htm

(https://forum.bottlehead.com/proxy.php?request=http%3A%2F%2Fco-bw.com%2FWaldo%2FFire_3.jpg&hash=fd643773be2ad0181499bd2e81256df3ab3a612e)
Note: the melted i-beam

(https://forum.bottlehead.com/proxy.php?request=http%3A%2F%2Fco-bw.com%2FWaldo%2FFire_6.jpg&hash=c9b71100091590f020a7b4c065876c4155fc5985)
This is where the friend I saw today lived. He said the cars ignited in the streets.

(https://forum.bottlehead.com/proxy.php?request=http%3A%2F%2Fco-bw.com%2FWaldo%2FFire_7.jpg&hash=c8e0a075a93ae9a34e00012cf3044f01f86a060a)
This entire neighborhood was about six square blocks and was a total loss.