Anderson Springs: During one of the many eerie moments in the escape video, the driver speeds through his community's entrance shrouded in smoke like something out of an apocalyptic film
As state officials placed the number of people displaced by two wildfires decimating communities in North California at 23,000 Monday, one motorist's heart-thumping first person video of his escape from the blaze is showing the world just how terrifying the situation has become.
The harrowing two minutes of footage posted to YouTube by user mulletFive begins with the unnamed driver careening through the smoke-filled streets of Anderson Springs, where the Valley Fire in Lake County had consumed an astonishing 61,000 acres as of Monday
The fire rages on both sides of the speeding vehicle, which passes beneath the Anderson Springs town gate like a scene from a apocalyptic film and beneath the video the driver appeared to tell the tale of his brush with death.
'We are the last house at the very back of the Springs, down in a gulch,' he wrote. 'There was no smoke or ash coming our way, and there were no sirens or air support nearby, so we honestly didn't know how close (the fire) was.'
But, he admitted, 'we did wait way too long to get out.'
As he sped away, the sky glowed a terrifying red and pillars of flame lit the way out of town as trees, electrical poles and entire homes succumbed to the inferno.
And the YouTube poster is far from the only Californian to lose his home and nearly lose his life.
Harrowing escape: A YouTube user has uploaded the harrowing video of his escape from Northern California's Valley Fire, which by Monday had driven some 13,000 from their homes
Mark Ghilarducci, director of Office of Emergency Services, said at a news conference Monday that about 13,000 have been driven from their homes by a wildfire 20 miles north of the famed Napa Valley.
He says about 10,000 people have been displaced from a second blaze less than 200 miles away in the Sierra Nevada.
People have packed evacuation centers as the fires have destroyed hundreds of homes and led to one confirmed death.
Ghilarducci says more residents are missing.
The fire exploded in size within hours as it chewed through brush and trees parched from four years of drought, destroying 400 homes, two apartment complexes and 10 businesses since igniting Saturday, Cal Fire spokeswoman Lynn Valentine said. By Monday morning, crews had gained 5 percent containment of the 95-square-mile blaze.
Residents fled from Middletown, a town of more than 1,000 residents, dodging smoldering telephone poles, downed power lines and fallen trees as they drove through billowing smoke. Several hundred people spent Sunday night at the Napa County Fairgrounds and awoke to a breakfast of eggs, bacon, and doughnuts.
Evacuees milled around eating, picking up donated clothing and walking their dogs. Nancy O'Byrne, 57, was evacuated from her home in Middletown, but it's still standing.
'I am very, very, very lucky. I have my house,' she said, her dog Nellie at her side.
Still, she was worried.
'This place is getting steadily fuller,' she said surveying the fairgrounds, where tents were pitched and RVs were parked everywhere.
Michael Alan Patrick, 53, had been at the fairgrounds since Saturday and lost his house in the blaze. When it broke out, he had been sitting in a park with his friends.
'It was like looking through a tunnel. You could see the flames coming,' he said. 'There was this big old pine tree, it lit up and it went whoosh and it was gone.'
Whole blocks of houses burned. On the west side of town, house after house was charred to their foundations, with only blackened appliances and twisted metal garage doors still recognizable.
Valentine said most of the destruction occurred in Middletown and Hidden Valley Lake, as well as among numerous homes along a shuttered state highway. Wind gusts that reached up to 30 mph sent embers raining down on homes and made it hard for firefighters to stop the Lake County blaze from advancing, officials said.
Four firefighters who are members of a helicopter crew suffered second-degree burns during the initial attack on the fire. They remained hospitalized in stable condition.
The fire continued to burn in all directions, triggering the evacuation of a stretch along Highway 281, including Clear Lake Riviera, a town of about 3,000 residents. It was threatening critical communications infrastructure as well as a power plant, Cal Fire said.
Gov. Jerry Brown on Sunday declared a state of emergency to free up resources. He had already declared a state of emergency for the separate 111-square-mile wildfire about 70 miles southeast of Sacramento that has turned the grassy, tree-studded Sierra Nevada foothills an eerie white.
Ghilarducci, of the Governor's Office of Emergency Services, said this summer's fires are the most volatile he has seen in 30 years of emergency response work. The main cause behind the fast-spreading fires is dry conditions from the drought.
'The bushes, the trees have absolutely no moisture in them, and the humidities are so low that we are seeing these 'fire starts' just erupt into conflagrations,' Ghilarducci said.
Lake County saw devastation in just the last two months. In late July, a wildfire east of Clear Lake destroyed 43 homes as it spread across 109 square miles. As firefighters drew close to surrounding that blaze, another fire erupted several miles from the community of Lower Lake on Aug. 9 and more than doubled in size overnight.
Residents in the area had to evacuate from their homes two times in as many weeks.
East of Fresno, the largest wildfire in the state continued to march away from the Sierra Nevada's Giant Sequoia trees, some of which are 3,000 years old, fire spokesman Dave Schmitt said. The fire, which was sparked by lightning on July 31, has charred 211 square miles and was 36 percent contained Sunday, the U.S. Forest Service said.
Firefighters have maintained a precautionary line around Grant Grove, an ancient grove of Giant Sequoia trees, and set prescribed burns to keep the flames from overrunning it. The grove is named for the towering General Grant tree that stands 268 feet tall.
Having dodged one fire this year in the sierra's, the current two fires, Butte and Valley, are just a taste of what's to come, just brutal if you get caught up in a fire storm.
Living in the sierra's, you have to be prepared for many things, like snowed in for days, no power, heavy rains closing roads, but fire is one thing that I have yet found a way to defend myself, my family, or my property from.
I was born in Oakland. My paternal grandmother's home was destroyed by the big Oakland fire in 1991, and we grew up having all our family meals there. (We moved to Florida with the Space program around 1966.) (I flew back a lot on sundry California trips.) I'd been to that classic Americana Holiday Gathering home for countless family gatherings, etc. I first went there in 1958 - or so I'm told as I've no recollection of my first few months, but knew it well through 1990. My aunts and uncles et al, remained in the Bay Area.
I visited my Grandma's old house site on around February? 1992 or so. (I went skiing too.) My grandma was in her house that day, trying to get out. (she was then 81). She was sitting in her car in the garage pushing the button to open the door, but the power lines had burned down. Our kind neighbors came over and found her in that garage, got her out, (with her dog) they three - plus pup - barely escaped the fire.
I have a video from a visit there after that time. I just researched it and same is still listed as the most expensive wildfire of all time. Here's what this insurance site of the ten most expensive wildfires ( [Link] ) has to say:
1. Oakland Fire, California, Oct. 20-21, 1991: $2.6 billion A small brush fire that reignited after firefighters thought it was extinguished led to the most expensive wildfire in U.S. history. The fire started high in the Oakland Hills, where brush was dry from five years of drought, and then raced down the slopes and spread in many different directions. Flames engulfed hundreds of homes within an hour and turned tony neighborhoods into streets of hell. The firestorm killed 25 people and devoured 2,843 homes and 433 apartments. (This was the one that burned down the homes of Amy Tan, Reggie Jackson, et al.)
I somewhere have 8mm videos showing the place in the years before the fire, and one taken a few months after it - that one from where my Grandma's house once stood. It was like visiting Dresden or Tokyo, (in miniature, I'm certain), but the warzone feeling was overwhelming. Most of the debris had by then been stripped, and all you saw were blackened hills with roads and concrete foundations that rolled over every hill into the distance in every direction. And occasionally, there would be some home which incongrously survived.
In all those visits (it was where my father grew up), I had never known that it had a great view of the bay. Why? All the trees and vegetation blocked the view. I should dig up that video- is was sad and creepy.
But Oh well. Life Goes On, and THANK GOD FOR GOOD PEOPLE WHO PROVE IT WITH ACTION - i.e., those great neighbors. (I don't even know their names - I lived in Fl.)
R.C.
P.s., the Title line above is from the great film, T. Malick's "The Thin Red Line."
I've had enough of someone else's propaganda. I'm for truth, no matter who tells it. I'm for justice, no matter who it's for or against. I'm a human being first and foremost, and as such I am for whoever and whatever benefits humanity as a whole.
- Malcolm X
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Having dodged one fire this year in the sierra's, the current two fires, Butte and Valley, are just a taste of what's to come, just brutal if you get caught up in a fire storm.
Living in the sierra's, you have to be prepared for many things, like snowed in for days, no power, heavy rains closing roads, but fire is one thing that I have yet found a way to defend myself, my family, or my property from.