I lived for about 30 years in the foothills above Loma Rica. I still live about 15 miles from there. There is a major fire in this area as well - Yuba County - but not much about it on the news, perhaps because the area is rural and perhaps because the fire news from Loma Rica is being overshadowed by the overwhelming fire news from the Napa/Sonoma area.
There have been about one hundred homes +/- lost in the Cascade fire (Loma Rica/Bangor), which is a significant percentage of all of the homes in the area. My daughter has childhood friends whose homes burnt to the ground in this fire, I also have friends who have lost their homes. We are planning to go up to help as soon as the evacuation orders are lifted and the closed roads are reopened.
BarbaraRose wrote:I just don't understand that. There is nothing they can do by staying there except to risk their lives and those who try to rescue them. So many people have been trapped and died already. Just not worth it.
It's not quite so simple as that.
When living in a rural foothill area of California, wildfire is never far from one's mind in dry conditions when the autumn winds blow. Sometimes there are "official" warnings of an approaching fire - much more often there are none. Telephone lines often go down during a wind storm, and cell service does not exist in many rural foothill communities.
One learns to make it a habit during fire season to go outside frequently to smell for smoke (frequently during the day and before going to bed) to listen for fire spotter planes (they have their own distinctive engine sound) and to check the sky for smoke columns (which can often be mistaken for cumulus clouds) when conditions are dry and the winds are blowing. This becomes a usual part of one's day. This is often the only way one will know that there might be an approaching fire.
The Loma Rica fire started around 11:00 p.m., after many people had gone to bed. Loma Rica is a rural foothill community, there are no warning sirens or anything like that. Telephones and cell service were probably down as the fire began to rage, so an automatic message sent via text or email might not have arrived - and even if it did, people were already sleeping.
The area is rural, homes are generally on small acreage, so it is not like one can run down the block knocking on doors. I have heard reports that there are homes there that are burned to the ground, with burned vehicles still in front of the leveled home. Think about the situation if the residents were sleeping, then woke up with their home surrounded by fire, with their vehicles already on fire. This happened. The result is grim. There was no time, opportunity, or warning to evacuate
Authorities have not yet had the time to check on all of the 100 +/- destroyed homes in the burned area.
Some years ago there was a major fire in the rural foothill community of Brownsville, where I then lived. We were under a sudden mandatory evacuation, but chose not to leave, at least for the moment. Why? Because we had livestock that could not be quickly moved, and had no place to go to if we left. We knew that, had we gone, we would likely not be allowed to return for several days, leaving our animals in dire straights.
Also, and this most importantly:
We knew where the fire was burning (on the other side of the ridge facing my house, to the east) and we were
not on an narrow, dirt, one-lane road (as so many rural places are) but were on the main paved road that ran north-south through our community. Our cars were packed, and I stayed up all night watching the ridge. We were not stupid, fighting a 100-foot wall of flames coming at us with a garden hose was not an option. I watched the ridge, and had the fire come over the ridge towards us we were set to go. Although I saw flames flickering at the top of the ridge a couple of times, it never came over the ridge and down towards us.
Had it done so, we would have released our livestock and just driven away, either to the north or to the south. It was a calculated decision, not without some risk. And a decision I am not telling anyone they should make in similar circumstances - all circumstances are different.
But: we knew the road, we knew how to get out, we knew where the fire was burning, we felt we were relatively safe.
That is one example of why someone might choose to stay during an evacuation order.
Every situation is different. It is never an easy decision.
Anne