My status, and the status of WUWT

NOTE: This will be a “top post” for a day or two, to be sure that most regular readers see it. New posts will appear below it, scroll down.

I have received a number of inquiries from around the world related to my welfare due to the #CampFire that destroyed the town of Paradise, CA on November 8th, and threatened Chico, CA where I live, on the same day.

I can tell you, I’m a bit beaten up, but I’m OK. More on that in a moment.

This is what the sky looked like at my home and office about an hour and a half after the fire began. It was surreal, and looked like a scene from Alfred Hitchcock’s “The Birds” Photo by an employee, Rick Anderson. Those are smoke clouds, and the black dots are birds fleeing the fire. The fire was over 15 miles away at that point. Click to enlarge.

This is what it looked like from space at 10:45AM November 8th, about an hour after the photo above was taken, we were on the north edge of the plume, and it had shifted south in that time.

I know some were concerned because I haven’t been posting much in the way of updates on WUWT. The reason for that is simple, I was busy in my job as a member of the media. I spent Thursday doing special reports for local radio station KPAY about weather and wind conditions, and I spent the night on the front-line of the fire as it threatened Chico, sending in reports, photos, and forecasts based on what I observed.

The death toll continues to climb, at least 23 confirmed so far with 110, possibly more, missing. Some people were burned alive in their cars while trying to escape. I’ve seen video that doesn’t make it on the news, and I wish I could unsee it.

Since that horrible day on November 8th, I’ve continued that process of reporting on radio, and also spent a lot of time on local Facebook groups as well as my own FB page, providing information to people in a different way, un-sensationalized like TV news does. Mainly, I’ve sought to calm people with accurate information. As a result, I got the highest complement I have ever received on Facebook: (I’ve never met this lady, we are only acquainted on FB)

I’ve continued doing that sort of dual role reporting on Facebook and radio since the beginning, while also dealing with personal issues related to the fire, just like so many others have. Every police officer in the town of Paradise lost their home, many state police officers and some Sheriff officers lost their homes. Yet, they are still on the job, protecting the public. There’s no words to describe that sort of dedication.

I have never seen such strength and courage and compassion in the face of total devastation. It is surreal, much like this photo of the flag amid the wreckage taken by Action News reporter Spencer Joseph.

One of the most stunning images I’ve ever taken. This is in the town of Paradise after the #CampFire swept through. All that is left of this street of homes is this American flag, still waving, still unburned. Photo and text by Spencer Joseph.

Many friends of mine lost their homes, including one who purchased a home in Paradise I used to live in. Many of my friends have lost people. I can’t begin to understand their level of loss and grief.

Two of my employees and their family members ran for their lives to escape the fire, and ran the gauntlet of flames, smoke, exploding transformers, and downed power lines. It is a miracle they survived. In a surreal twist, a daughter of one of them had taken video of their escape, and it was leading TV newscasts all over the world.

There are lots of cars used in the escape that looked like this after the fire:

Photo by Julie Lucito, Nov 8th, 2018

Two for certain, and possibly three of my employees have lost their home in Paradise. A fourth employee who live in Forest Ranch, CA has been evacuated from his home, and it remains under threat.. On Friday, there was so much smoke that people were using flashlights. Streetlights and car headlights were on, and the local EPA air quality monitoring station peaked at 995 for particulates (it doesn’t go any higher) and stayed there a good portion of Friday, November 9th.

These people are part of my extended family, some have worked with me more than 20 years. It’s like a gut kick, but at the same time I’m incredibly grateful that we are all whole and unharmed. But they have nothing but the clothes on their backs, a vehicle each, and some personal belongings they packed in a “go bag”.

Now, I’m faced with the task of keeping my weather business whole while my employees deal with their losses and grief. I’ve told them that they can lean on me, that their jobs are secure, and we’ll get through it together.

But, that requires I step away from WUWT for awhile, there’s no other way.

To that end, I made contact with Charles the Moderator (Charles Rotter) who was instrumental in Climategate, and he’s agreed to take over as editor for as long as I need. I’m in his debt.

For those of you that want to help, there’s always the tip jar. But you can also help by contributing guest posts, tips (see the top menu-bar for links) and most importantly (and this costs nothing but a few seconds of time) please SHARE WUWT ON SOCIAL MEDIA. This gets us exposure, and it’s something we need. Many of you know what Google, Twitter and other media platforms have been doing, and this is a way to fight back.

[I’ll post an update for a charitable organization to help victims of the fire that I trust in the coming days, right now I have to find out details.]

[~ctm long time contributor Kip Hansen has set up a fund. This is for money that Anthony can direct to appropriate people or agencies.  You can find it here.]

The fire threat is diminishing, and you can see below, the fire has stopped growing significantly:

It is time for me to take a break. I have a meeting with all my people coming up, and I need some rest so that I can be strong for them.

My thanks to all of you, as I sign off for awhile.

Over to you, Charles, with gratitude. – Anthony

 

 

 

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Steven Mosher
November 12, 2018 2:39 am

Keep up the good work.

You could not pick a better helper than Charles, saved my bacon more than once.

995 pm25, dang thats like beijing air

Gerard
November 12, 2018 2:47 am

As a volunteer firefighter on Black Saturday these images have brought back terrifying memories and fear that arises every time the pager sounds through summer.
Best wishes and prayers are with you Anthony

Barry Sheridan
November 12, 2018 3:09 am

Stay safe Anthony, and of course for all those exposed to this threat. Fire is frightening, especially when it is driven by high winds.

jim heath
November 12, 2018 3:11 am

Pre burn: OFTEN. Much better to burn deliberately on a cool calm day. Every square centimetre of Planet Earth has been on fire several times, plan ahead firebreak the entire town. Manage fire don’t let it surprise you.

hunter
November 12, 2018 3:23 am

The best people are those who balance reason and compassion.
You are among the best.
Thank you for the update.
You and yours, as well as all impacted by this terrible fire, are in our thoughts and prayers.
Stay safe.

Carbon Bigfoot
November 12, 2018 4:29 am

I have waited for a chance to donate. I like the fact that it will help Anthony and his people— never know how major charities distribute the money. You folks have helped my sanity since inception. I hope many more will provide assistance. God Bless.

CoRev
November 12, 2018 4:32 am

Thanks for the update, Anthony. Many of us wondered and worried about you and our other CA family and friends.

Robertfromoz
November 12, 2018 4:33 am

All the best Anthony and stay safe .

John Kelly
November 12, 2018 4:33 am

Strength to you and your family Anthony.

Moderately Cross of East Anglia
November 12, 2018 4:46 am

What is going on is horrifying and I can only echo the best wishes for you and your community so eloquently made by your many supporters on this website. Take care, we will be here when you feel you are able to get back. All best wishes.

James Bull
November 12, 2018 5:02 am

Take care of yourself and those who are close to you, it’s good that you can give fact based information not just at WUWT but also for your local community it’s sad when so many are running about screaming and not helping the situation.

“Hear my prayer, O Lord; listen to my cry for mercy.
In the day of my trouble I will call to you, for you will answer me.”
Psalm 86:6-7

God Bless
James Bull

Ethan Brand
November 12, 2018 5:03 am

Thank you Anthony. You are a distillation of those qualities that would make the most ardent cynic sit back and smile…there is fundamental good in the world. One of my previous “careers” was as an accident investigator. I also have read hundreds of accident reports, survival stories, etc. In over 40 years of investigating and reading, I note that there is a very common quality to those who survive, those who help, those who are remembered for lifetimes after horrendous events. Those people see what is actually around them. Their world is not defined by what they internally conceive (relatively unchallenged by reality) or imagine, but by a steely determination and ability to see, decide and act based on their best assessment of what is really there. Since this is not how most humans behave, they seem to perform miracles, from the perspective of those that can’t, won’t or don’t see what is really happening. Ultimately they subjugate their egos to the harsh and uncaring world around them and do what needs to be done. Most of us, at some time, likely owe our lives, our lively hood, our well being ,to those people.

Thank you for being one of them.

Ethan Brand

Kevin Kilty
November 12, 2018 6:02 am

Thanks, for the update, Anthony. I had noticed the lack of postings and was quite worried about what it might mean. The scope and speed of this fire is hard to absorb. Best wishes to you and all the good folks in the area.

2hotel9
November 12, 2018 7:32 am

Damned glad to hear you and so many others are alive, one helluva mess to be caught in. Will be hitting the tipjar and donating to Mr Hansen’s effort. Posting this to FB immediately.

Doctor Gee
November 12, 2018 7:32 am

Anthony – My prayers and best wishes to you and your employees and all respective families. The loss of “things” is a tremendous blow, but so thankful you all are safe. I can’t imagine the pain/sadness for the loss of those who were unable to make it out of Paradise and surrounding areas.

Keep up the good fight!

– Gordon

littlepeaks
November 12, 2018 8:21 am

I’m happy to hear that you’re still doing OK, Anthony.
These wildfires really show up well on https://earth.nullschool.net if you turn on the Mode–>Chem and under Overlay, turn on COsc (Carbon Monoxide Surface Concentration).
https://earth.nullschool.net/#current/chem/surface/level/overlay=cosc/orthographic=-119.31,35.19,3000/loc=-104.392,-22.950

TomRude
November 12, 2018 8:34 am

So what is so far the explanation for this fire?

Barbara
Reply to  TomRude
November 12, 2018 9:12 am

Probably just have to wait for an answer.

If there still are hot -spots, can’t walk or drive over large hot-spots. If tree roots catch on fire, their roots can burn for several days.

Best to stay safe in this situation!

Reply to  TomRude
November 12, 2018 11:08 am

A dry forest with dense undergrowth in many areas without controlled burns to protected heavily populated areas.

The 3-way product of 1) the 2016 El Nino producing a 2016-2017 rainy season rain driven growth (remember the nearby Oroville Dam overtopped its emergency spillway on 11-12 February 2017) and 2) a predictable drying out from Fall 2017 into 2018 of that new growth, and 3) a lack of forest management by state and local fire management agencies (bureacratic cowardice) to reduce risk to populated areas with controlled burns.

Bureaucratic cowardice occurs because controlled burns sometimes become uncontrolled, thus it is safer for politicians and bureaucrats to do nothing and then use Climate Change as their “The Dog Ate my Homework” excuse.

tweak
Reply to  TomRude
November 12, 2018 2:59 pm

PG&E noted they had a 115kV line loose power a few minutes before “Camp” fire started.

Now Socal Edison is doing a metoo on the Woolsey fire.
https://ktla.com/2018/11/12/electrical-circuit-went-down-2-minutes-before-woolsey-fire-was-reported-socal-edison-says/

Bill Rocks
November 12, 2018 8:42 am

We will be here when you return. Stay safe, take care of yourself.

November 12, 2018 8:44 am

California’s fires occur frequently and for a rich state I’m surprised by it’s unpreparedness to deal with these terrible events.
I hear governor is already blaming global warming, instead of spending money on useless projects he shoud consider having effective prevention by having one Galaxy C5 (useful load around 100 metric tonnes) located at LA and another at SF airports loaded with fire retardant on standby 24/7/7, ready to go into action at a report of even minor fire outburst.

tweak
Reply to  vukcevic
November 12, 2018 3:03 pm

Well, yeah the blame is with global warming…. HYPE.

Eliminate local capacity and you have to shunt the power in from elsewhere… drop a live high tension line and you get fire. Both PG&E and Socal Edison have noted transmission line issues just before the respective fires broke out.

leitmotif
November 12, 2018 8:54 am

The BBC, Jerry Brown and Neil Young all blame climate change for the California wildfires. The insurance companies will breathe a sigh of relief.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-46175339

JR Ft Laud
November 12, 2018 9:33 am

Thank you for keeping us updated. Be safe!!

William Astley
November 12, 2018 9:42 am

Thank you, Anthony, for the update.

My thoughts are with you and others affected by the wild fire.

https://www.sacbee.com/news/state/california/fires/article221448500.html
Cal Fire has listed Pulga Road as the Camp Fire starting point.

Cal Fire officials have not disclosed a cause for the Camp Fire, which by Saturday night had consumed more than 105,000 acres, destroyed more than 6,700 buildings and caused a reported 23 deaths.

However, PG&E submitted a report Thursday to the California Public Utilities Commission about an outage at a 115-kilovolt line on Pulga Road in Butte County at 6:15 a.m. that day, and noted that the site was near the Camp Fire.PG&E officials declined to comment. However, in a public statement, PG&E wrote that customer safety is its No. 1 issue and that the fire’s cause remains undetermined.

“The cause of the Camp Fire has not yet been determined. PG&E has provided an initial electric incident report to the (PUC). The information provided in this report is preliminary and PG&E will fully cooperate with any investigations.”

The utility had initially indicated earlier in the week that it might preemptively cut off electricity to parts of several Northern California counties, including Butte, as a safety measure because of fire danger. But company officials said they decided not to, saying weather conditions did not warrant it.

The utility company has been criticized in the past year by residents and state officials after a bevy of wildfires tied to downed power lines swept through the state in October 2017.

Investigative reports in May and June from the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection linked PG&E to 16 fires in 2017 that killed 18 people and destroyed thousands of homes and other buildings.

The PG&E service area covers much of Northern and Central California, and includes 18,000 miles of power lines. It will spend up to $70 million this year to clear vegetation near those lines, a spokesman said in an email.

RCS
November 12, 2018 10:27 am

You have my best wishes in this horrible situation.

I sincerely hope that these fires will be brought under control soon and the loss of life and damaged stopped.

Our thoughts are with you and we all understand that WUWT is not your priority at the moment.

Les
November 12, 2018 10:28 am

I’ve lived in a war zone, helped those around rebuild. My daughter works in Ft Mac… a Canadian community where 80,000 evacuated in through the flames of a fire a couple years ago.

May you and those with you continue to find heart and courage to move forward one step and one breath at a time.

In my experience, the more mercy you give in times like yours, the more you find.

As others noted, we are with you and will be here when you get back.

Special thanks to Charles for stepping up.

Rich Davis
November 12, 2018 2:07 pm

My deepest sympathies Anthony. I hope that things can return to normal for you as soon as possible.