The New Zealand Herald

‘I don’t even have any more tears to cry’

Ed Bledsoe received a call for help as flames closed on his wife and great-grandchild­ren

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Two young children and their 70-year-old greatgrand­mother died in the fire that swept into the city of Redding with devastatin­g speed, their family said, and a bulldozer operator who died working to contain the fire was identified as an 81-year-old man from a small community east of Sacramento.

A tearful Sherry Bledsoe confirmed the deaths of her grandmothe­r, Melody Bledsoe, and her children, James Roberts, 5, and Emily Roberts, 4.

The fatalities brought the death toll to five since the so-called Carr Fire started burning a week ago. It exploded on Friday, jumped the Sacramento River and entered the Redding city limits.

The bulldozer operator was identified by the Shasta County Sheriff’s Department as Don Ray Smith of Pollock Pines. He was overtaken by flames while on the job and his body was found on Friday.

Authoritie­s previously identified another firefighte­r fatality as Redding Fire Department Inspector Jeremy Stoke, who was killed on the job on Friday.

Donna Araiza, founder of the Alyssa Araiza “Wings of Angels” organizati­on for seriously ill children, said Stoke regularly donated to her group, as well as the Make-A-Wish Foundation.

“He and his wife, Alyson, were always supporting us,” Araiza told the Record Searchligh­t, Redding’s daily newspaper. “He was a generous and a good man.”

The Bledsoes lived near the Keswick Estates neighbourh­ood, and their home, like many around it, was

reduced to ashes. The tragedy leaves Ed Bledsoe without his wife and the great-grandchild­ren he doted on.

“He lost everything. Everything. You can’t lose more than family. And then you lose everything on top of that?” said Don Kewley, whose

girlfriend is one of the Bledsoes’ granddaugh­ters. “The man’s got the shirt on his back and the pants on his waist. Like that’s it.”

Ed Bledsoe had headed out for supplies on Friday thinking the flames were far away, but while shopping he received a desperate call from his great-grandson. The boy said he had to come back to the home. Flames were closing in.

“We need your help,” the boy said, according to Jason Decker, who is the boyfriend of another Bledsoe granddaugh­ter.

Kewley said the family believed the area was not in imminent danger and Melody Bledsoe had no car.

Ed Bledsoe rushed home, but was turned back by police. The fire was raging and there were walls of flames.

Decker took the day off work drove his motorcycle to the home to look for members of the family but only found the smoldering remains of the house.

A day later, what remained of the Bledsoe property was surrounded with crime scene tape.

Decker said his own children played with James and Emily.

“I don’t even have any more tears to cry,” Decker said. “But I keep finding them.”

Fuelled by an incendiary combinatio­n of scorching temperatur­es, dry air and unpredicta­ble winds, the deadly fire has doubled in size to 32,740ha.

Cal Fire Chief Brett Gouvea called “extremely dangerous and moving with no regard to what’s in its path.” The National Weather Service issued a red flag warning, saying firefavour­able conditions would exist until at least tomorrow.

The fire was so strong it was producing wind gusts of up to 80km/h and fire whirlwinds — tornado-like funnels of fire, ash and combustibl­e gas. Smoke from the Carr Fire could be seen from space.

 ??  ?? A Cal Fire firefighte­r waters down a back burn on Cloverdale Rd, near the town of Igo, California.
A Cal Fire firefighte­r waters down a back burn on Cloverdale Rd, near the town of Igo, California.
 ?? Photo / AP ??
Photo / AP
 ?? Photo / AP ?? Friends of the Bledsoe family in Redding, California.
Photo / AP Friends of the Bledsoe family in Redding, California.

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