Fast-moving flames force people to flee on a moment’s notice
FALLBROOK — Flames were practically on top of Dick and Joan Marsala’s home when they got an urgent knock on the door and were told to leave.
FALLBROOK — Flames were practically on top of Dick and Joan Marsala’s home when they got an urgent knock on the door and were told to leave.
The couple, in their mid80s, grabbed only a change of clothes and medications before fleeing Thursday through wind gusts and smoke as fire swallowed the row of mobile homes behind their place in the Rancho Monserate Country Club north of San Diego.
It’s a story that has played out in communities across much of Southern California this week as ferocious winds whipped sparks into massive infernos that have destroyed more than 500 buildings, killed dozens of horses and forced hundreds of thousands of people to run from fires that have burned nearly 250 square miles since Monday.
The flames that tore through Fallbrook, self-proclaimed “Avocado Capital of the World,” and nearby Bonsall, home to a premier racehorse training facility, traveled so far that even people who found temporary refuge had to move again when the fires got too close.
Flames sprang up so quickly and moved so fast that three people were burned Thursday trying to escape. Many of those who managed to get out unscathed did so with only the clothes on their backs after abandoning a lifetime of possessions to fate.
The Marsalas and other unlucky homeowners returned Friday to find their homes in ruins.
Dick Marsala was too overwhelmed to speak as he searched through the smoldering remnants in search of his wallet. It was still too hot, so he climbed back out. Peering through a broken window, he spotted a framed photo still hanging on a blackened wall. It was a picture of him golfing.
“I’ll be darned,” he said, his eyes tearing up as he put on sunglasses.
The charred gray remains of much of the 55-and-over community stood in stark contrast to the bright green nine-hole golf course where Marsala and others in the community played regularly.
Many residents were on the course when the fire swept into the area, driven by dry desert Santa Ana winds that surpassed 35 mph. That was too fast for firefighters to stop the flames.
“The crews were trying to stay out ahead of this as quickly as they could,” said Capt. Kendal Bortisser of the California Department of Forestry and Fire Prevention. “As we know, when a tornado hits the Midwest, there’s no stopping it. When a hurricane hits the East Coast, there’s no stopping it. When Santa Ana winds come in, there’s no stopping them.”
Tom Metier was brushing his teeth to get ready for a doctor’s appointment when sheriff’s deputies pulled up and yelled, “Get out now!”