Santa Fe New Mexican

Man who lived in forest unable to escape fire

- By Thomas Fuller and Nicholas Bogel-Burroughs

LAST CHANCE, Calif. — Even for Last Chance, a rugged community in the forests above the Pacific Ocean where residents mill their own lumber and grow their own food, Tad Jones was particular­ly ascetic.

He shunned electricit­y and plumbing. He once spent a year living in the hollow base of a redwood tree.

For decades he took a vow of silence, scrawling in notebooks or on a tiny chalkboard when he had something to say.

If anyone could outsmart a wildfire, friends thought it would be Jones, 73. He had turned countless times to that same path, which leads to the Big Basin Redwoods State Park and its towering, 2,000-year-old trees. But the fire outmaneuve­red him.

A week after Jones disappeare­d down a fiery road on the night of Aug. 18, smoke still poured from fissures in the sandy soil in the forests.

Along a narrow path at the edge of a steep ravine, rays of sunshine pierced the smoky haze and shone on the scorched shell of the minivan that Jones had used to try to flee.

Jones’ escape was thwarted by a firestorm that ran so hot that it vaporized the windows of the van, melted the wheels and stripped all color from the surroundin­g forests, leaving acres of trees protruding from the ash-covered ground like so many burned matchstick­s.

The fire in Last Chance — one of hundreds of lightning-ignited fires that burned across Northern California and killed seven people — leveled all but a few of the 100 homes scattered along the six miles of Last Chance Road.

It devastated a back-to-the land community establishe­d in the early 1970s that with its annual barn dance and its vegetable patches fed by spring water seemed to harken back to an earlier era.

One of Jones’ neighbors survived the fire by submerging himself in his backyard pond.

Another neighbor — the last man who spoke to Jones alive — spent an entire night in a clearing dodging flying fireballs until dawn, when he walked across six miles of burning forest to safety.

For the last three decades, Jones, an Army veteran, lived in Last Chance in a wood cabin the size of a garden shed. He delighted in feeding the California quail, peacocks, blue jays — and foxes in the evenings.

“His companions were the animals,” said his sister, Jill Jones. “When you take a vow of silence — and he was pretty much a monk — what’s around you is critters, and other people are not necessaril­y going to understand who you are and what you’re doing.”

‘A rare bird’

As a young man in Columbus, Ohio, Jones was far from the hermit-like figure he became.

When he enrolled at Ohio State University in 1964, he sported short hair, joined a fraternity and showed an interest in business.

But he got kicked out of school as a result of a fraternity prank and was drafted into the Army soon after.

He was posted to Germany at the height of the Vietnam War, which he strongly opposed, and his sister said he seemed to grow increasing­ly resentful of government.

When he returned, he became more of a loner. He finished his degree and moved with a woman he’d met in college to Sanibel Island in Florida, living in a school bus until an argument led to a breakup.

Jones made it to the West Coast, where his sister said he lived for at least a year in the base of a redwood tree.

He also began to study under Baba Hari Dass, a monk who moved to California from India in 1971 and was silent for most of his life. Jones found a community at the Mount Madonna Center in the Santa Cruz mountains, a spiritual retreat and yoga center founded by Baba Hari Dass’ followers.

“Tad, for a fairly unique group of people, he was unique,” said Ward Maillard, who used to serve as president of the Mount Madonna Center and frequently correspond­ed with Jones. “He was a rare bird.”

Jones went silent, too, in the late 1970s. He told some people in letters that he had done so in part to tame his fierce temper.

The vow of silence calmed him, but it couldn’t fully suppress his anger.

“He could swear up and down on a piece of paper,” recalled Windy Dipa Rhoads, who considered Jones to be her godfather.

Rhoads recalled one instance when she saw Jones’ temper flare. Once, when she was about 4, an extended family member slapped her for not sharing a toy with a little girl, leading Jones to leap out of a window, run over to the woman and backhand her across the face without uttering a word.

In the early 1980s, Jones moved to the small, A-frame cabin in Last Chance.

Up in the mountains, Jones spent much of his silent days feeding the animals, scattering food in myriad hiding places. He took monthly trips into Santa Cruz, often walking eight miles to the entrance of Big Basin Redwoods State Park, where he would catch a bus to town. In recent years, he had taken to catching a ride from a friend or neighbor, or renting a car once a month.

Jones’ cabin had a large window that looked out into the woods. He had a small stove heated by firewood, and he slept on a camping mat on the floor. A few pictures hung on a shelf he had built against the wall, and he kept some perishable food in large, plastic trash cans outside that he watered down to keep them cool.

He was reclusive, but he kept close tabs on what was happening elsewhere. He subscribed to National Geographic, listened to the news on KGO — an AM radio station that reaches the mountains — and read the Santa Cruz Sentinel, frequently sending clippings of news articles or political cartoons to friends and relatives. Now and then, he wrote letters to the paper — musing about swallows, railing against rising bus fares or proposing a method for drivers to signal that another car was following them too closely.

Jones’ sister, Jill, said he chanted through the years to keep from losing his voice. But living alone in the woods began to get more difficult about a decade ago. In 2009, he narrowly escaped a fire that tore through the area. Jill called the post office, worried he had died, but an employee told her he had just come in to pick up his mail.

His arthritis also worsened, and he survived prostate cancer, managing to get through his doctors’ appointmen­ts without speaking. But when he needed to get a hip replaced around 2016, he told his sister he needed to speak to the doctors and nurses. He walked with the aid of canes and began to talk again, after nearly four decades.

Throwback

Last Chance shares its name with the old logging road that snakes through the forest along ridgelines and across a creek. Residents say they are not sure where the name came from but many repeat a story about the first white settlers calling it Last Chance because it was the state’s last refuge for grizzly bears — and the last chance to hunt them.

Five decades ago, the land was divided into parcels and sold off.

Steve Smith read about Last Chance in a classified ad in the San Francisco Chronicle. He bought 10 acres in 1971 for $15,500 and built a house from adobe bricks that he fashioned from the local soils. The house withstood flooding during torrential rains in 1982, the Loma Prieta earthquake in 1989 and the Lockheed wildfire in 2009.

“I guess we are survivors,” Smith said last week as he surveyed the destructio­n of his family homestead — the adobe and the two homes he had built for his two daughters.

Others who lived in Last Chance included contractor­s, pot growers, a geologist, surfers, an expert in machines to measure particle physics, artists, nurses and a former motorcycle drag racer.

 ?? THOMAS FULLER/NEW YORK TIMES ?? LEFT: Jones’ charred minivan near where his body was found at the bottom of a ravine in Last Chance, Calif., in August.
THOMAS FULLER/NEW YORK TIMES LEFT: Jones’ charred minivan near where his body was found at the bottom of a ravine in Last Chance, Calif., in August.
 ?? ISHAN VEST VIA THE HANUMAN FELLOWSHIP ARCHIVES ?? ABOVE: Tad Jones in New Mexico in 1975.
ISHAN VEST VIA THE HANUMAN FELLOWSHIP ARCHIVES ABOVE: Tad Jones in New Mexico in 1975.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States