(Please note: Princess Buttercup is not eaten by the eels at this time.)
The phone call came at 2:15 AM, from the county sheriff: a recorded message telling us that our area was under mandatory evacuation. I woke up Jane, got dressed, woke up the kids, looked out the window. The fire didn’t look any closer than it had when we went to bed. Grabbed a few last minute things—a book of family history, some Cheerios, a spare set of car keys—got in the cars and went. We were out of the house in 25 minutes, and could have been out in less if need be. There was a police car at Orange Avenue; the officer told me that everything above Orange Avenue was being evacuated.
We trucked on down to CV. We could see the mountain clearly from there. There were still lots of small fires along and just below the ridge line, pretty much where they’d been when we went to bed. Seemed odd that we’d been asked to move it. We parked over the gym, looked around until we found the Red Cross shelter in the cafeteria, at the other end of campus (oh, well), went in, signed in, were escorted on down to what used to be the Girl’s Gym, and settled down on cots. The boys went to sleep; I tried to go to sleep; the girls couldn’t go to sleep. There was a lot of coming and going at first, as more people came and the volunteers set up additional cots.
Around 4 AM, a Sheriff’s Deputy came in and woke us up. It seems that there had been a miscommunication between the command center out by Hansen Dam and the CV Sheriff’s Station as to the exact area to be evacuated. I didn’t get a precise description, but it seems to be a band stretching across La Crescenta a few blocks down from the topmost houses, well above our house. They apologized humbly and sincerely, and told us we could go home.
The most interesting bit, though, is the reason for the evacuation. I gather that the Command Center wanted everyone out of that region by 8 AM because they are going to set some backfires on the mountain side. This strikes me as a good idea; the south slope of Mt. Lukens is the only significant piece around here that hasn’t burned, and the top edge of it is on fire. If they burn it from bottom to top, then they don’t need to worry about winds coming up and making it burn from top to bottom, and driving embers out across the valley and the houses. I’m all for that.
Please note, all I really know about this plan are the words “back fires” and “Deukmajian Wilderness”, and that was at second or third-hand. There might be more on-line, but we went on home and went to bed, and I’ve not yet taken time to look. Slept much more easily than when I went to bed last night, too—there’s nothing like having the authorities tell you, “Oh, yes, you’re safe there; go on home.”
There’s a lot of smoke in the air, this morning, but for all that it’s fairly clear, ever so much better than it was yesterday.
God is good!
Update: Verified that there will be a “tactical burn” this morning; see the City of Glendale web site.