 dodged a bullet
|
Joined: Jan 2005
Posts: 3,954
Loquacious
|
OP
Loquacious
Joined: Jan 2005
Posts: 3,954 |
well, the last week has been intersting. My Mom and Stepdad live in Colorado Springs, butt up against the Foothills, so most of you can guess where this is going. Went down last Sat for a visit, and noticed a plume of smoke, so called it in (along with hundreds of others). It developed quickly into a large blaze, but was 4 miles away and several valleys away from their house. All that changed Tuesday. My Mom called to see if we could help pre-evacuate, but before I got 30 minutes down the road it had gone to a full blown evacuation. By the time I got there, they had managed 1 carload, and every intersection west of I-25 was blocked by police. I managed to get past to meet my parents at a meeting place we had picked, but they never made it. I was then stuck with 300 other cars on a dead end road, and sat around for the next 2 hours waiting to evacuate rather than help with evacuations. Well after a while, I noticed the fire come over the top of a ridgeline like, well, literally WILDFIRE, and within minutes a plateau full of houses to the south was completely aflame. To say it looked like Dantes Inferno was an understatement. I was convinced that their house, which was trapped between the fire that had already burnt the Flying W Ranch to the ground and the fire wrapping around to the north towards the Air Force Academy, was already burning. We finally had an old rancher who cut through his fence and led a convoy of about 100 cars through the Air Force Academy property on a fire road through the woods, and I think the guards at the Academy were a bit suprised to see us come pouring out of the woods 300 feet from the South Gate!!!  Well, for the rest of the night, I watched what looked like a lava flow and fire engulf all of the western edge of the Springs, with sirens everywhere and a mix of flashing lights and flare ups all over the hills. I missed the next day when they called in C130s to make low speed passes through the canyons, dumping 3000 gallons at a pass versus the 1000 that the dedicated fire bombers usually run. We've been waiting since then to find out if the Waldo Canyon fire did to my Moms neighborhood what it did to Mountain Shadows and Flying W, but the fireline came within 1200 feet, but the fire crews managed to save the whole subdivision! They got word last night that they could move in, and are back home now, but I think with bit of a weather eye toward the ridgeline across the street from their front porch, which is now nothing but blackened stumps. Surely a thing of beauty, evil beauty nonetheless, to watch up close, but nature in action, and sometimes when nature and man get too close, she reminds us to back off a little....
|
|
|
 Re: dodged a bullet
|
Joined: Nov 2006
Posts: 1,302
Learned Hand
|
Learned Hand
Joined: Nov 2006
Posts: 1,302 |
That must be a humbling experience watching fire ravage and take what took years to build and wipe it out in a few hours. Glad your mom's place got spared.
mike
2006 neon blue speedmaster
|
|
|
 Re: dodged a bullet
|
Joined: Jan 2005
Posts: 3,954
Loquacious
|
OP
Loquacious
Joined: Jan 2005
Posts: 3,954 |
Mike, given that it took out 346 homes between approx. 5pm Tues and sunrise the next morning, along with over 8000 acres, being reminded just how powerful and how it can be destructive to one home while sparing another in the next lot, humbling is a good word to describe it. We are ants on a ant hill, no matter how potent we think we are as a species....
|
|
|
 Re: dodged a bullet
|
Joined: May 2006
Posts: 2,647
Loquacious
|
Loquacious
Joined: May 2006
Posts: 2,647 |
Very true. Glad you're all ok.
06 America 904
|
|
|
 Re: dodged a bullet
|
Joined: Jul 2007
Posts: 6,060 Likes: 6
Worn Saddle
|
Worn Saddle
Joined: Jul 2007
Posts: 6,060 Likes: 6 |
Wow, what an experience! Glad your mom's house was spared.
Fidelis et Fortis
|
|
|
 Re: dodged a bullet
|
Joined: May 2007
Posts: 6,432 Likes: 1
Worn Saddle
|
Worn Saddle
Joined: May 2007
Posts: 6,432 Likes: 1 |
I know what you're feeling. Tornadoes did that to my neighbors last April. It's truly amazing how nature rebounds, a year later the scars remain but the regrowth has begun.
A positive attitude may not solve all your problems, but it will annoy enough people to make it worth the effort. Herm Albright (1876 - 1944)
|
|
|
 Re: dodged a bullet
|
Joined: May 2011
Posts: 754
3/4 Throttle
|
3/4 Throttle
Joined: May 2011
Posts: 754 |
Greg, glad to hear your mom's place was spared. I try to make it out to backpack in the Arapaho or Gunnison Natl forests each summer and fire risk is always high.....I can only imagine the devastation in and around CO Springs.
Karl Odessa, MO '07 America, Cinnamon Girl (aka: Black Beauty or Ol' Penny) - Sit Down, Shut Up & Hang On
|
|
|
 Re: dodged a bullet
|
Joined: Mar 2005
Posts: 2,419
Oil Expert
|
Oil Expert
Joined: Mar 2005
Posts: 2,419 |
Wow! Exciting read (from this safe distance) but glad to hear you and your folks are safe and were spared the loss. These things help to get our priorities back in order.
Cheers, Richard ~~~~~~~~~~~~ 09 America, Staintune Pipes, K&N, Breathe, Hagon Nitros, AI & O2 removed, tune 20184 (modified), MTX-L a/f gauge
|
|
|
 Re: dodged a bullet
|
Joined: Dec 2006
Posts: 7,028 Likes: 8
New Tires
|
New Tires
Joined: Dec 2006
Posts: 7,028 Likes: 8 |
I'm glad you and your's are safe, but I've had it much worse, I've been waiting since Thursday night for a air conditioning repairman.  Glad all's safe.
Every normal man must be tempted, at times, to spit on his hands, hoist the black flag, and begin slitting throats.
H. L. Mencken
|
|
|
 Re: dodged a bullet
|
Joined: Feb 2005
Posts: 20,096 Likes: 2
Fe Butt
|
Fe Butt
Joined: Feb 2005
Posts: 20,096 Likes: 2 |
Wow Greg! What an experience!
Glad to hear your mom and stepdad's home has survived this tragedy currently unfolding in Colorado.
(...though my heart goes out to those in that area who weren't as lucky, and to the family and friends of the crew of one of those C130s which crashed yesterday)
Yep! Just like a good Single Malt Scotch, you might call me "an acquired taste" TOO.(among the many OTHER things you may care to call me, of course)
|
|
|
 Re: dodged a bullet
|
Joined: Jan 2005
Posts: 3,954
Loquacious
|
OP
Loquacious
Joined: Jan 2005
Posts: 3,954 |
Quote:
I'm glad you and your's are safe, but I've had it much worse, I've been waiting since Thursday night for a air conditioning repairman. 
Glad all's safe.
Mac, could've been worse, you could have been waiting for a plumber with a really badly backed up toilet after a case of Montezumas Revenge, huh? 
|
|
|
 Re: dodged a bullet
|
Joined: Jan 2005
Posts: 3,954
Loquacious
|
OP
Loquacious
Joined: Jan 2005
Posts: 3,954 |
Quote:
Wow Greg! What an experience!
Glad to hear your mom and stepdad's home has survived this tragedy currently unfolding in Colorado.
(...though my heart goes out to those in that area who weren't as lucky, and to the family and friends of the crew of one of those C130s which crashed yesterday)
Yeah, I just heard about that, what a shame!!! I'm also torn between anger that we aren't using aircraft like the converted 747 (that can dump 20,000 gallons in ONE shot) or DC10's that also can at least double the C130's payload, and realizing the reality of handling large aircraft like that in a mountainous scenario where the updrafts and downdrafts caused by the fires would be a nightmare for pilots. But when I hear that our firefighting aircraft fleet is almost ZILCH nationwide, while hearing the Secretary of the Interior also saying we have ample airborne resources wants to make my yell, "Oh really, tell that to the over 700 homeowners who have lost homes in a matter of weeks here because of these fires. But the reality is that the Waldo fire jumped the last canyon between the wilderness areas and the Springs in something like 8 minutes I believe, or some ridiculously fast number, and getting any large aircraft on scene in that kind of time would have been too little, too late. It was an inferno, and with 346 homes all burning within a very very short time was beyond what ANY firefighting force could deal with, so the fact that it didn't take out ALL of western Colorado Springs (given how close homes are here and with the abundance of nice ripe-for-burning pine there) is a testament to their heroism.

|
|
|
 Re: dodged a bullet
|
Joined: May 2007
Posts: 6,432 Likes: 1
Worn Saddle
|
Worn Saddle
Joined: May 2007
Posts: 6,432 Likes: 1 |
A positive attitude may not solve all your problems, but it will annoy enough people to make it worth the effort. Herm Albright (1876 - 1944)
|
|
|
 Re: dodged a bullet
|
Joined: Jan 2005
Posts: 3,954
Loquacious
|
OP
Loquacious
Joined: Jan 2005
Posts: 3,954 |
I WAS going to ride down on the bike to help them, but glad I didn't. Fifteen miles out of the Springs between Franktown and the Springs, it got really smokey and dismal looking, and then started pouring, bringing down all of the soot and ash. My car and windshield were smeared a nasty gritty grey color and it was pretty hard to see, not to mention it was really f'ing up my contacts, and it tasted like I'd just licked a wet ashtray. That would have been a real joy to ride through! Sad thing was that it was too far away from the Springs to dump any rain there, but it was able to contribute 60 mph winds to the fire which helped fan it along quite a bit!
|
|
|
|
|