November and new fires are hitting California. It is unusual for the fire season to be going this late, but a hot summer and no substantial rain yet have left a lot of dead dry grass and timber around.
Paradise was one of those quaint little towns. Founded in 1877 it had a variety of housing styles and showed its history as an old former mining town. A lot of folk retured there because it was close to Chico, but far enough away to ignore the noise and bustle of a University town.
We'll wait and see what is left, and hope a high percentage of residential owners had enough insurance. The town of Paradise, a relatively small foothills town, a little under 30,000 residents total, 10 miles east of the famous party University town of Chico, and about 85 miles north of Sacramento, was burned mostly to the ground a couple of days ago
The Camp Fire has expanded since then to over 100,000 acres. More than 6,000 residences are gone. The number of people thati are known have died is this fire is approaching two dozen, with around 115 missing and unaccounted for. 250,000 people have evacuated. For the record 100,000 acres is 156.25 square miles or about 405 square kilometers. If you put all the fires in California right now you have an area about the size of all of the City of New York.
I have a few friends that lived in Paradise. Right now they are scattered all over as friends took them in. They've lost their homes. The fire has moved west to Chico which is why th3e number of evacuees is rising so high. I have a brother who lives in Chico, haven't heard from him yet, but I'm not real worried, I'm sure he's evacuated and we talk so infrequently I'm not who he is likely to call, if he has a phone right now.
Smoke is bad down here in the Sacramento area. Friends are reportedly having serious breathing problems. I'm staying in my home hoping it doesn't get to me.
You remember last year when the Oroville dam almost failed? Helicopters are making many many trips dipping water out of that lake today fighting the fire. The firefighters are showing up in large numbers, but the blaze is still only 20% contained as of the last news I read.
The Woolsey fire in Ventura County down south is nearly as big. The Hill fire, also in Ventura County, is only around 5000 acres.
Luckily, most of the fire is in sparsely populated area, but several fairly small towns are either threatened or already consumed by the fire.
It is going to be a tough winter for the Chico area. Ventura county is going to have it tough as well.
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