I went outside to go to the other building and found that I couldn't breathe when I got back to my desk.
I just had to use my inhaler... and I'm not even close to any of the fires.
Whether you're in Ventura, Simi Valley, Rancho Cucamonga, Hemet, or San Diego... If the fires are close to you, please be careful.
Here is a particularly detailed account about one San Diego community from the L.A. Times
Life-or-Death Choices on Staying or Fleeing
By Scott Glover, Jack Leonard and Megan Garvey
Times Staff Writers
October 28, 2003
LAKE VIEW HILLS ESTATES -- The phone woke Joe McLean shortly after 3 a.m. Sunday and outside he saw the red glow of flames in the hills surrounding his rural San Diego County home.
He woke his daughter and wife, then alerted a few neighbors. Up and down this winding canyon road, residents were waking to the smell of smoke and the noise of barking dogs and honking horns.
With no help from fire crews and no instructions from authorities, families packed up cars, and others set out on foot. There was only one way out: Muth Valley Road.
Neighbors in this tight-knit community just south of the San Vicente Reservoir had only minutes to make choices. By dawn, four who lived on the street would be dead, and half the homes would be destroyed. On Monday, the survivors told their stories.
The McLeans had the best vantage point in the hilly neighborhood of 10 custom homes. They could see towering flames closing in and wasted no time collecting any possessions.
In three separate cars, the McLeans were the first through the neighborhood's security gate about 3:15 a.m.
Concerned the electricity would fail and the families would be trapped, Bob Daly, 75, opened the gate when he got word of the fire from McLean. Then Daly headed back home.
Along the bending Muth Valley Road, fire rose as high as the neighborhood's towering pine trees. Joe McLean trailed his wife and daughter, raising his hand as he drove to shield his eyes from the heat. He worried that heat would melt the plastic windows in the ragtop Jeep driven by his 18-year-old daughter Jennifer. But there was no turning back, he recalled thinking.
Rodney Weichelt, 35, and his father, Bob, 59, were close behind. They could see McLean ahead. Embers pelted Rodney Weichelt's van, sounding to him like machinegun fire. He dripped with sweat.
At his home up the road, Stephen Shacklett, 55, corralled his four Irish wolfhounds, got them into his RV and drove toward the gate. His girlfriend , Cheryl Jennie, 59, was still at the house, planning to leave soon in her own car.
In the neighborhood that night to housesit, Natalie Corbett, 39, called 911. The operator told her she was on her own. She asked if she should leave, and the operator said to go if she thought she could make it. She loaded her dog into her Bronco and fled past the gate, driving through a curtain of fire. A fallen cable was stretched tight across the road and flipped her truck, sending it skidding off the road. Surrounded by flames, the Bronco resting on its side, Corbett said she wrapped herself and the dog in a sunshade and prepared to die, sucking on a wetted washcloth she had brought with her.
Other families were still at home.
The Hamiltons — Steve, his pregnant wife, Jodi, and their toddler son — had decided to take two cars. At first they could smell smoke but couldn't see even a glow. Hurrying but not frantic, they began packing collectibles and photo albums. Steve Hamilton, 43, took their 2-year old son Alexander in his car. Jodi Hamilton, 38, put their boxer, Libby, in hers.
Larry Redden, 64, had awakened at 12:30 a.m. to the smell of smoke. Redden, who retired last year after three decades with the San Diego Fire Department, walked out on his deck to check on the fire, then went back to bed. He and his wife, Laureen, 44, woke again when McLean called. The Reddens roused her parents, who lived with them, and got ready to leave.
The Shohara family — James, Solange and their grown son Randy — were the newest family in the neighborhood. At their home near the gated entry, they too prepared to flee.
About the same time, Bob Daly and his wife, Barbara, 67, pulled out of their driveway.
By 3:30 a.m. the Hamiltons, Reddens, Shoharas, and Dalys and Cheryl Jennie formed a six-car caravan through the entry gate. With Redden leading, they were stopped by wall of fire. The families turned around and headed home to decide what to do next.
At their expansive Spanish-style home, Steve Hamilton, vice president of a construction company, began moving vehicles and equipment out of their garage as his wife and son waited. Jodi couldn't understand why he was wasting time. Nearly hysterical, she woke her mother up in Connecticut to tell her the fire was close. Her mother, who had visited before, told her to take her son and head for the nearby reservoir. Leave Steve behind if you have to, she advised.
The Dalys conferred with the Shoharas, who were walking toward a dirt road to the reservoir.
"I don't think you should go down there, it's too rough a road," Bob Daly told them.
Solange Shohara told him they were going anyway.
Minutes later, the Dalys considered following. They walked in the same direction as the Shoharas, but after taking a look down the rough access road, his vision blurred by smoke, Bob Daly made a decision.
"No way," he told his wife. "We're going back to the house to jump in the pool."
Jennie cast her lot with the Reddens and followed them back to their tiled-roof home. You look like you know what you're doing, the retired firefighter recalled her saying.
Larry Redden, drawing on his years of experience, decided defending the house was the best way to survive. While his in-laws, wife, neighbor and dogs huddled in the living room, he donned his old firefighting gear and poured water from the pool around the perimeter of the house.
The others held out hope that help was on the way. Laureen Redden said her husband leveled with them: "Hey, they've written us off. We're on our own."
Jodi Hamilton decided to take her mother's advice. She got into the driver's seat of her husband's car, planning to head to the reservoir. Her husband said they would never make it. He had another plan. They would drive to a dirt flat near their house and try to dodge the flames in their SUV.
He hosed down the SUV, turned on the air conditioning and raced the vehicle back and forth, trying to stay away from the fire. In the backseat, Alexander, shrieked: "Hot. Hot."
"You couldn't see — the smoke, the ash," Jodi Hamilton said. "It looked like hell or what I pictured hell to be."
The Dalys had gotten back to their house to find it already in flames. Fully clothed, they plunged into the pool. Bob Daly urged his wife to keep dunking her head underwater so embers wouldn't ignite her hair.
As fire burned everywhere, they began a running dialogue about what they could hear exploding; the propane tank, the windows. The fire got too hot to bear. They jumped from the pool and ran across the street to an area the fire had already passed through.
Up the street, with flames too close to keep wetting down the house, retired firefighter Redden joined the others inside. Fire roared on all sides. They could hear it rushing over the roof.
"We just watched it come and prayed," said Laureen Redden. To her mother, Judy Bloomfield it was "just this horrible roaring wind. There is nothing like it."
Also surrounded by fire, Jodi Hamilton placed another call to her mother from their car. "I don't think we're going to make it out of here," she told her. They said their goodbyes.
Then almost as suddenly as it had descended, the fire passed. The Hamiltons were alive. It was about an hour after they and the other families had first turned back from the gate.
Bob Daly and his wife surveyed the destruction. At dawn he began to walk the street to check on the others. He had last seen the Shoharas on foot. But down the block, he saw their car, a melted shell, with two bodies inside. He dialed 911. They told him they would send paramedics. He told them to send the coroner.
About 100 yards away, he discovered another body. He believed it was the Shoharas' son Randy.
Jodi Hamilton, hearing of the deaths, thought her family would have died too if her husband hadn't stopped her from heading to the reservoir. After taking their chances dodging the fire in their car, they returned to find their home spared.
Outside the gate, along Muth Valley Road, Larry Redden found the burned-out shell of Stephen Shacklett's RV and a body inside.
Natalie Corbett was on the road too. She had been certain she would die after her car overturned.
She had tried doze off to escape the pain. At dawn, she was finally able to see well enough to find her cellular phone. She dialed 911 again. This time paramedics came, smashing a window to free her and her dog.
On Monday, Joe McLeansaid he was grateful to be alive but tormented by a sense that he had not done enough to warn the others.
"The thing that haunts you " he said, standing outside his home, his eyes welling with tears. "Had I remembered, had they known five minutes earlier, maybe they would have gotten out."
Copyright © 2003, The Los Angeles Times
Posted by jozjozjoz at October 28, 2003 04:06 PM | TrackBackHey there.
Be careful, eh?
You are entirely too pretty and witty to breathe in that shit.
Just dropped by from your link on Friday Fishwrap.
;)
Burn, baby, burn! Disco Inferno! . . .
Posted by: michael at October 28, 2003 05:53 PMGad, that is so terrible!! I was born in Ventura, and it's burning up! Please stay safe joz!
Posted by: ~Mel at October 28, 2003 11:45 PMDamn that sucks, I hope they can take care of those fires once and for all.
Posted by: MOE at October 29, 2003 08:46 AMI've been avoiding going outside as much as possible. I'm even driving to the post office down the street to avoid walking. This whole thing is so sad.
Posted by: sean at October 29, 2003 10:01 AMIts funny you should post that article. I am Rodney Weichelt's son, and Bob is my grandpa. Our house is sooo totally gone and it hurts like no other. I was luckily up in Washington at the time.
Posted by: Frankie Weichelt at December 11, 2003 05:42 PMAfter reading this article one must agree that the individuals and families that were left to fend for themselves within the gated community on Muth Valley Road were definitely victims of this most devastating fire. Whether or not their homes were destroyed or spared is regardless to that fact. They were all, in every sense of the word, a victim of this fire. Who in their right mind could deny that? Well would you believe F.E.M.A. has?
I was recently talking with Natalie Corbett, the young woman from this article that called 911 just to receive the disturbing news that she was on her own. Natalie clung un to the only help she was going to receive from her call to 911, the advise for her to leave if she could because there was no help or rescue coming. Natalie took the advice. She grabbed the dog, jumped in her truck and headed on her way. Confronted by a wall of fire she felt as if there was no choice but to break through it. Natalie scooped up the dog with one arm and placed him on her lap and held him tight as she barreled down on the accelerator-driving head on into the fire. In fear of the gas tank exploding, she drove as fast as she could. Relieved when she broke free of the fiery wall unscratched. Still determined to get out she continued driving a little further down the road when she was brought to a stop by a downed telephone pole. Unknowing to whether the wires were hot or not she rolled her truck up to the pole and started to push it out of the way with her truck. Natalie was able to get this telephone pole out of her way only to come across another downed one roughly 50 feet down from the first. She tried the same maneuver with this pole as she did with the first only this time the wires appeared to be fully stretched out across the road. Not really considering that this would make a difference, Natalie began to try and push the pole off the road. When suddenly, in a boomeranged like affect the wires snapped back against her truck causing her to fly off the road. Rolling, landing on the vehicles side, pinned in and embedded in the middle of a group of boulders. Trapped in her truck for over 2 hours while the fire burnt its way around and over her. It was only after the fire past though that area search and rescue was able to get though to get Natalie out of the truck.
Although Natalie was pinned in from the accident she was fortunately unharmed, and reluctant to go to the hospital. However the paramedics insisted otherwise assuring her that the city of Lakeside would take care of the cost.
Now there you have pretty much heard the whole story of what happened to Natalie Corbett on the early morning that she had to flee for her life.
Now let me tell you what has happened since!
Natalie Corbett applied for assistance to cover the cost of damages that her truck incurred while fleeing the fire.
She was denied! F.E.M.A. stated the extent of the damage wasn't great enough to consider her a fire victim. Unbelievable! I'm sure that it was once they realized the stupidly behind that reason for denial that they came up with this one! Since Natalie Corbett wasn't paid up on her liability insurance on her truck F.E.M.A. would be unable to offer her any assistance. I just have one question in responce to that. Under the circumstances, WHO CARES? I mean what difference does it really make? Maybe I'm the stupid one here because I just don't understand.
But lets just for a minute jump back to the first excuse used denying Natalie assistance. Well if the extent of damages to her truck wasn't enough for F.E.M.A., how about the $11,000 medical bill that was sent to Natalie from UCSD for the hour and forty-five minutes that she was in the hospital. I suppose I should also mention that UCSD Med Center refused to give Natalie an itemized version of that bill. Natalie did have one set of x-rays taken. No blood work, however. Less then 2 hours there I just can't see the cost justification. I guess I can't see it because UCSD is refusing to give it.
Posting on January 7,2004
Posted by: Loren at January 23, 2004 10:07 AMHi!
My name is Loren and I posted the article regarding Natalie Corbett on January 7, 2004.
If anyone has any response to the article please feel free to contact me about your thoughts. Or,
If you have found yourself in a similar situation as Ms Corbett's, where FEMA's has refused assistance or you have received some outlandish medical bill with an unjustifiable or even bogus billing amount on it, then you too, should also respond and let it be brought out into the open.
Remember, it's always harder for legitimate claims to get honored when we keep allowing medical facilities and so forth to collect on claims that are fraudulent.
LET YOUR VOICE BE HEARD!
May the power of the Web be with you!!
Loren
movindwntherd@juno.com