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Zorro

(16,593 posts)
Thu Jan 16, 2025, 02:54 PM 18 hrs ago

A NEW KIND OF URBAN FIRESTORM

Everything around Walker Savage was smoke. Smoke and embers and broken tree limbs and the relentless roar of the wind. Wearing a respirator and goggles from his woodworking studio, he sprayed his garden hose into the gale, hoping to wet the walls and porch of his 99-year-old adobe house enough to keep them from igniting.

But then he saw the flames come surging down the mountain above his home in east Altadena, California: “It was like an avalanche,” Savage said. “But not of snow — it was of fire.”

More than a week later, Savage is still trying to wrap his mind around the Eaton Fire, which killed at least 16 people, destroyed an estimated 7,000 structures and is still only 45 percent contained. The flames moved faster than firefighters could fight them, reaching deep into the suburb to scorch houses well outside the state-designated risk zone.

The blazes that have consumed Altadena and the Los Angeles neighborhood of Pacific Palisades hearken back to historic urban firestorms — a kind of disaster that was supposed to have been extinguished by the development of modern fire departments and strong building codes.

https://wapo.st/40wmLkB

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