LA burns, smoke blackens sky, people flee and abandon cars, 90 and 100 mile an hour winds feed and fan the flames, people losing everything, even being rich, or famous cannot save their big homes and life's possessions. Someplace in that expanding, raging inferno my son, an Oregon Fire Chief leads 300 Firefighters and their 75 engines and water tenders over 900 miles south into the fire storm. Along with firefighters from other states. Mutual support rendered.
One of my son's firemen is his own son, and my 21year old rookie grandson with a little over one year on the job. His seasoned father has fought many battles with all kinds of fires, he set to retire in May after 30 years on the job. He has seen it all, with never a scratch or a "singe", but my grandson has never experienced anything of this magnitude, being one of a 4-man truck crew battling side by side in the belly of a raging beast.
All these 30 years I worried for my son's safety, now it starts anew, for our boy barely a man that walks in his father's shoes.
I will not sleep well until they are all home safely. I grieve for the victims of this awful tragedy.
When others run away from fires, or danger these rare breeds run towards them, firefighters and police unselfish public servants. And we would all be in deep Doodoo without them.