On July 13, a fire was reported down by Camp Creek, where the infamous Camp Fire began in 2018. We weren't worried for ourselves as there was a good response, and the fire didn't come towards us in an alarming fashion. I went to Chico for a chiropractor visit, and Jeffery took a load to the Neal Rd. dump. Normal day. Fire nearby. Alert but calm.
 |
Day 2 photo of the poof of smoke that blew over the Tobin Ridge
|
On July 14, I saw smoke behind the Tobin Ridge and alerted the neighbors, but the plume dissipated quickly. . Jeffery and I had planned to meet up that day with our kids down in the Valley, and all still seemed well, so we left despite Dixie.. The fire was still down at the tunnels at the Cresta Reservoir and across the river from us, so we snapped some shots and kept going.
 |
As we head towards Cresta Dam and the Elephant Butte tunnel, this is what we see.
|
Even when on July 15, (Bob's birthday!) we were told that Tobin was ordered to evacuate, we stayed with the kids, and came back to Tobin on the 16th to begin to gather our belongings. By then, the fire had moved up to Rock Creek, and was over the top of the Tobin Ridge,so we knew that it was time to get packing, just in case. Bob and Grover already had our fire hoses out, hooked up and charged for the same reason.
 |
| The view of the Tobin Ridge from Hwy 70. Jackass Creek is obscured by the large central tree in the foreground. |
 |
| I drove up to check my mailbox and this was the view of the switchback road over the top of Tobin Ridge, headed toward Rock Creek. |
Fire crews arrived to scout the property but the rest of that day was watching smoke blow up and away from us mostly. In the evening, the heat began to rev and the fire could be seen on the mountain ridge, and we had some big sunset plumes and night-time scenes; but the fire still did not send us fleeing in terror or fill our world with thick smoke.
 |
| The fire is taking off somewhat up in the Bowl of Jackass Creek |
 |
| The smoke looks scary, but most of the illumination comes from the sunset behind the smoke. |
 |
| As night comes on, you can see the lip of the Bowl ablaze. |
 |
| We did some fire watching that night. It was pretty far away at that point, and we'd seen fire like this before. |
 |
| There's our crew, keeping an eye on all of Tobin.. |
On July 17, I drove up to Caribou to hike with Brenda and pick blackberries. We had a lovely time, and couldn't see the fire at all. On our way back down Hwy 70, that changed, and we could see the plume from many vantage points. Still, many views hid the fact that fire was in our neighborhood, so the stress was still low-medium. We'd been through this many times; just last year; and we were ready to go, and to protect our home, and to not get all emotional. We went to bed that night with fire widening across the Ridge and beginning to drop down Jackass Creek.
 |
| The fire still doesn't look that bad this morning. |
 |
| On my way home from my hike with Brenda, I saw this plume over Ben Lomond. The peak also had fire climbing over its left shoulder, which runs downstream towards our area. |
 |
| From our overlook, it simply doesn't seem to Impend in a frightening fashion. |
 |
| As the day passes, I can suddenly see some flammage below the Bowl. This view is from in front of my house, looking past my Smoking Room to the Ridge beyond. |
 |
| Zoom up - yep, those are flames. The Dixie Fire is on the face of the Ridge now. |
 |
| We hear it and see it from Grover's front yard. |
 |
| A different angle, looking north |
 |
| Here's some of our crew, ready to protect us. |
 |
| The City Lights affect |
 |
| Another night in lawn chairs with cups of coffee |
It was Sunday, July 18, when the winds started blowing and the fire began to spread rapidly on the Ridge and up the canyon along the highway, and we felt helpless terror and fascination as we listened to the explosions and roars and pops and crashes and whooshes of various pieces of mountain-side going up in flames. The wind let us hope that it would stay over there, but that hope soon died.
The wind got capricious, the fire crossed the highway, the river and then the railroad tracks. It was on our mountain, just around the bend, and moving towards us. The crews, already thick on the ground, increased, and we 9 locals who had set hoses and conferred and helped guard Tobin together began to say our farewells to each-other. No amount of hose use by us could help at that time. By 3 p.m., we who were leaving were out, evacuated, refugees. I left Jeffery and friends at the Shady Rest rest area and headed down to the safe place I would use in the Valley.
 |
| This map was captured at 6:25 a.m. |
 |
| The fire began to roar as the morning wind came up. First the fire fell down the hill, then it began to spread out wider and burn up the hill again. |
 |
| The view from the bonfire pit with fire on the ridge. |
 |
| Big flames. Loud roars. |
 |
| More big flames, and the smoke thickened. The leaning tree became a marker for me. Would it survive this terrible fire? |
 |
| The wind blew strange shapes of fire and smoke. |
 |
| Bob watches the fire from near Grover's and the bonfire pit. |
 |
| Art shot of my leaning marker tree in the pink smoke. |
 |
| From our cone-zone overlook, we watched the fire fall down towards the railroad tracks and burn into the Jackass Creek drainage. |
 |
| Terrible flames spurt out of Jackass Creek. The Big Blue fire train would be called upon to save the culvert under the tracks, lest the fire toast and destroy it. There are lots of culverts in the canyon. |
 |
| Fire in one's world is so terrifyingly fascinating. |
 |
| The fire climbs all around the hills, being ignited by wind-driven debris and by explosive heat |
 |
| It is now, as the fire grows and falls towards the river that I feel the wind change. It was blowing on my right cheek, then suddenly it was against my left cheek, and I grew nervous. |
 |
| Jackass Creek really begins to take off in a dry section |
 |
| I know it's like seeing the same pictures, but the fire keeps moving and growing, and dying where it was an inferno earlier, so I keep taking pictures |
 |
| Jackass Creek is now wreathed in smoke |
 |
| View from Mary's, looking upstream - North - to where the fire is moving. The fire will jump the highway, the river, and the railroad in a couple of hours, and the fire's edge will come within 20 yards of this yard (from the right) |
 |
| Fire drops off the mountain slopes and starts fires on the other side of the highway |
 |
| A fire crew dealt with it right away. There were lots of patrols going on. |
 |
| View of the Tobin Bridge. Jackass Creek comes down the mountain beyond the far end of the bridge. |
 |
| Last glimpse of this view before I head out of Tobin, truck loaded with photo albums and other valuables, to become an official evacuee. |
 |
| The Shady Rest rest area, 8 miles downriver, is where we meet up before parting for our seperate refuges. Jeffery and Grover will stay in our travel trailer right there and go back to Tobin early the next day. I'm heading farther, knowing I'll probably be refused re-entry. |
 |
| The pyrocumulus cloud seen from Jarbo Gap - 18 driving miles from Tobin. |
 |
| The cloud seen from south of Oroville - 40 driving miles from Tobin |
 |
| The final shot. From there on, I could no longer see my enemy. Relief and guilty feelings, but I would serve as liason and info-gatherer, rather than go through another Back-fire Operation, which is what was going to happen in Tobin that very night. |
 |
| This map was captured at 6:25 p.m. |
 |
| This map was captured at 8:31 p.m. |
 |
| This is what greeted Jeffery and Grover upon their return. A weary crew of Hero Guardians, making their morning cuppa joe. |
 |
| Here's more. They are the Marin County Fire Department. Our nephew Casey is a fireman with that team, but not on this fire. Thank you from the bottoms of our hearts. Other teams were vital, too, and we thank every single one of them. |
 |
Sara was first to tell me that she heard Tobin was SAFE (I wept), and then I found this heat map. That's my driveway up to Dunedin on the "left arm" of the unburned island that is thickly surrounded by fire.
|
I will end here, as this was the MAIN EVENT. Scary Parts 1-4. There will be aftermath photos later.
AGAIN. WE THANK EVERYONE WHO IS FIGHTING TO SAVE OUR COUNTY, OUR HOMES, OUR NEIGHBORS AND OUR LOVED ONES. THE SKILL AND EXPERTISE YOU OFFER IS VERY HUMBLING. OUR GRATITUDE.
I', so glad you're OK and Tobin still stands. Stay safe.
ReplyDeleteGreat documentation on the fire, a story too familiar to many residents across the State of California in recent years. God Bless the firefighters that saved your's and other residents along the Canyon. Praying the road back for everyone is not too difficult.
ReplyDeleteThese pictures and your story are a truly wonderful historical record!!
ReplyDeleteThanks for this flame by flame account!
ReplyDelete