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It's PERPETUALLY FIRE SEASON in LOS ANGELES
October 2003 brings us many fires raging through Southern California, all at once of course. Here's an up-close view early in the week of the Grand Prix Fire near Lytle
Creek
Here's a link to our local fire site where you can find maps and stuff about our fires. There is a lot of smoke everywhere. Here's a picture of the
smoke as seen in my neighborhood 15 miles away.
And the ash is falling everywhere. My car needed a wash before
but now it needs a scrub.
Later in the day I saw on the internet that San Antonio Heights,
north of Upland had received evacuation orders.
Within 15 minutes flames popped up on the ridge above where Kevin lives. It looked like this:
No, that's not snow. That's ash and embers falling from the
sky. It sounded like sleet. We packed and loaded up cars frantically. All tube amplifiers were welcome in my car.
The local newspaper snapped this shot of Kevin loading up his van with rare vacuum tubes as the fire approached.
Within another 15 minutes the flames were marching down the hill closer and closer to Kevin's house.
Appropriately named, Amber, gets little Willie out safely as the flames get closer.
We took several cars down the hill to bring stuff down to his warehouse. Then we went back up in a van to grab one more load of things. By this time the fire had engaged one or two houses down the street. The whole hillside was ablaze and you could feel the heat bigtime.
So then Kevin says goodbye to his house...
Feeling the heat of the fire just about 100 yards away, we sped off to the fire station.
The wind had really picked up by then. Kevin's neighbor was able to get an engine sent to his cul-de-sac and we left knowing at least there was a fire fighting crew from Pasadena there. Last we saw, it appeared the main push of the fire had gone along further to the west. I got home around 1am just in time to celebrate Daylight Savings Time. I was up watching the news and celebrated 1am twice. Sunday Morning update: Waking up around 8:30am, the Santa Ana winds were blowing fiercely. (Oh and by the way, we do not call them "Devil Winds." Only the news agencies think we do.) I saw on the news the fire had marched along to Claremont and La Verne. Called my bestest friends Will and Vieve who live in Northern Claremont. They see the glow from their backyard. They have a 20 foot tall block wall preventing them from seeing much else other than "glow". They live on the southern edge of the 210 freeway. (Yes you can hear the traffic of this new 210 leg from their backyard but we all just pretend it is the ocean.) Concerned about Manley Employees: I Called Paul in Arizona and
(also appropriately named) Smokey in Alta Loma to see if anybody had heard from
Bruce who has a house in Padua. 50 homes went up around there in Palmer Canyon
and the historic Padua Theater down the street got nearly torched but saved. Got
news that Bruce and Julie are OK. Julie evacuated to her mother's and Bruce is
up in Idaho. (The fires haven't yet spread to Idaho.) Several houses are burned on
their street but their house is spared (that they are trying to sell.)
So much for the real estate bubble in Padua....
Looking down the street from Kevin's house, here's the blackened
hillside bereft of vegetation the day after the fire.
You can see how close the fire came to Kevin's house from this action shot from the same view.
Close call. Kevin is open for business now. A generator arrived and his computers all hooked up again and back on-line. All is well with Kevin, however, there were casualties...
2:30pm update: Just talked to Auntie Ann down in Poway, CA. just north-east of San Diego between the Miramar and Ramona area fires. The bigger one is called the Cedar Fire and has consumed 90,000 acres, 100 homes, and several people's lives. This one was caused by a stupid lost hunter who started a signal fire to get un-lost. OK Darwin-Award Winner! We know where you are now! You and that Cub's Fan are going to share the same cell. There's fires on two sides of Auntie Ann's area. While chatting on the phone describing the smoke plumes to me coming from quite some distance away, presto! flames appear on the ridge, several ridges from her house. Well, I told her to take five minutes as an exercise and think about what they would throw into their cars if given 1/2 hour to evacuate. These flames move fast. Best to be prepared. Here in Chino Hills, 15 miles of dense suburbia, strip malls, roads, and industrial parks away from all the action, the Santa Anas have died down. It is dark and orange again as the smoke camps out over the area. No shadows. Thanks to everyone who has called with concern. More later as we know it. --Vanimal
Foothill Fire 9/22/2002 and spread east towards the Claremont foothills. It showered ash all over everything.
Here's the view of it from the factory roof.
There was another fire down the street from us also in September 2002.
Turns out this one at the Insulfoam factory was set by a disgruntled employee who had gotten canned the day before.
It is a good thing Cindi is not disgruntled!
It is Los Angeles so it must be Fire Season...
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