San Francisco Chronicle

Survivors’ losses ‘just unimaginab­le’

Survival in the lake: Trapped residents of tiny Concow plunged into chilly reservoir

- By Kurtis Alexander

CONCOW, Butte County — When Scott realized that his lakeside home in the wooded hills of Butte County was surrounded by fire, he knew he had only one way out: the water.

He, his wife and their two young adult sons, along with two dogs and a cat, plunged into the chilly Concow Reservoir 20 miles east of Chico last Thursday as flames singed the giant tule reeds on shore behind them.

Not far from the family, at least a dozen others, some elderly, had also rushed into the mountain lake, all wearing what they’d woken up in. They were from a caravan of vehicles that a firefighte­r had been trying to escort away from the early-morning blaze before the group ran into the same wall of fire as Scott, who asked to be identified only by

his first name.

The firefighte­r ordered the drivers out of their vehicles and into the murky water.

As time passed, the sizzling heat from the shoreline forced some to go deeper into the lake. Theirs would become another astonishin­g tale of survival from the Camp Fire, which continued to grow Tuesday after becoming the deadliest and most destructiv­e inferno in California history.

Among those saved was 90-year-old Bruno. Scott’s son, Michael, helped their older neighbor from his home and into the reservoir, though he wasn’t sure he could survive the dip.

“Bruno was saying, ‘Just leave me. I can’t do this,’ ” Scott recalled. “I said, ‘Bruno, we’re not going to leave you. And I’m not going to burn, so you better hurry.’ ”

Before the Camp Fire laid waste to the town of Paradise, making the popular retirement community the center of the historic ruin, thousands living reclusivel­y in the thick pines above had lost homes and loved ones.

In the first hours, the residents of remote places like Concow worked arm in arm to limit their losses, and save as many lives as possible.

“Most of the attention has been on Paradise,” said Scott, 51, who has lived in Concow for decades and didn’t want his family’s name used because of the sensitivit­y of his wife’s job. “We don’t get any attention here. We don’t really want it.”

Around Lake Concow, where recovery teams have been slower to visit the charred remains of horse ranches, organic farms, pot grows and the secluded enclaves of long-distance commuters, the chilly and windwhippe­d water became a sanctuary — but a deeply inhospitab­le one. Especially for Bruno.

As Scott and Michael’s family cat struggled to stay afloat in a tiny cage, Michael noticed a pair of small rowboats chained to a nearby log. He loosened the vessels and helped Bruno, his mother, his brother and the family pets board. Everyone but his dad.

“There wasn’t enough room for all of us,” said Scott, who insisted that the others paddle to safety while he remained submerged.

It was so cold, he said, that at several points he waded back toward the flames to warm up.

Farther north on the lake, Scott’s in-laws were among an estimated 15 people standing shoulder-deep in water. Some of their abandoned cars, which included an old Dodge truck, a minivan and a Kia SUV, remained on Hoffman Road on the north side of the reservoir Tuesday.

Cal Fire Division Chief Garrett Sjolund, who is based in Butte County, said additional firefighte­rs came to the aid of the fleeing residents, handing out fire shelters, the popup tents that serve as a last defense against life-threatenin­g heat, to those that couldn’t withstand the water.

“It was a true rescue story,” Sjolund said.

At some point, Michael navigated his crew to an island in the middle of the reservoir. They were safe from the flames, but the frigid water left Bruno drifting in and out of consciousn­ess and suffering severe hypothermi­a. Michael proceeded back into the water and then onto shore to find help.

“Somebody knocked on my door and said there was an old man on the island,” said Concow resident Peggy Moak, whose house was one of the few that survived the fire as hundreds of others around her were reduced to ash.

Moak said some friends and family threw a canoe into the back of a truck and headed to the lake. They were back in no time, having collected Bruno and the rest of the family.

“The man was fully clothed, too, all his jeans and shoes,” Moak remembered. “He looked like he wasn’t going to last much longer.”

She and others stripped Bruno of his garb and warmed him with a hot bath, tea and fresh clothes, and he appeared to liven up, Moak said. He was later driven to a hospital in Chico. His condition Tuesday was not known.

Authoritie­s confirmed that several of the others in the reservoir were hospitaliz­ed, some with serious burns. Their status was not clear either.

Scott remained in the lake until the fire ran its course. When he finally returned to shore, he was virtually unharmed.

Troy Miller, who lives nearby, had heard the stories of neighbor helping neighbor and had, in fact, gotten a hand from some friends after his home was leveled by the fire.

“We take care of each other here,” he said, as he camped out on his small lot with his two dogs. “We take care of ourselves.”

 ?? Gabrielle Lurie / The Chronicle ?? Paradise Firefighte­r Mike Rea surveys a property for remains at the Paradise Community Village Apartments.
Gabrielle Lurie / The Chronicle Paradise Firefighte­r Mike Rea surveys a property for remains at the Paradise Community Village Apartments.
 ?? Photos by Gabrielle Lurie / The Chronicle ?? Above: Troy Miller says it was a “miraculous act of God” that he survived. Left: Trapped people jumped into the lake and huddled on an island.
Photos by Gabrielle Lurie / The Chronicle Above: Troy Miller says it was a “miraculous act of God” that he survived. Left: Trapped people jumped into the lake and huddled on an island.
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