Imperial Valley Press

California ‘dream house,’ decades in the making, is in ashes

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VACAVILLE, Calif. (AP) — When he closes his eyes at night, Hank Hanson hears sirens in his dreams -- a byproduct of living nearly 30 years in the wildfire-prone wilderness of Northern California between San Francisco and Sacramento.

But at about 1 a. m. Wednesday morning, Hanson knew he wasn’t dreaming when he looked to the hills above his home.

The ridge line, where he and his wife in daylight tracked the sun’s shifting seasonal paths, was lit up as if someone had strung lights across it and plugged it in.

“It started pouring toward us like a waterfall,” Hanson said.

The fire was one of the more than 500 wildfires ignited across California this week from what state firefighti­ng officials are calling a “lightning siege” — summer thundersto­rms that produce little or no rain but have prompted nearly 12,000 lightening strikes across sun-scorched terrain.

More than 13,700 firefighte­rs are battling the blazes, the most severe of which are focused in Northern California west of the state capital in Sacramento and east of the San Francisco Bay.

The extraordin­ary reach of the flames has pushed firefighti­ng resources to the point “we have not seen in recent history,” said Shana Jones, chief of the Sonoma-Lake-Napa unit of the state Department of Forestry and Fire Protection.

With firefighti­ng crews stretched thin, there was no evacuation warning for Hanson and his neighbors.

Luckily, Hanson was awake because his electricit­y was out and the stifling 95-degree (35C) temperatur­e prevented him from sleeping.

He quickly woke up his wife and the two raced in their diesel truck down the road. The air rang with car horns as people desperatel­y tried to wake up their neighbors.

Hanson and his wife made it to a hotel room in the nearby community of Fairfield, grateful they were alive. They found out later that their house was destroyed by the fire.

The house was really two houses. The first was a small redwood home originally built in Vacaville in the 1930s but later moved to the property. Hanson, who owned a business that made patio enclosures, bought the property in 1974. He spent weekends there for the next 17 years, planting walnut, peach, fig and eucalyptus trees.

In 1991, he completed a 3,000 square- foot (279-square-meter) addition to that house. It had a wine cellar, indoor and outdoor pools plus three fireplaces.

The fires this week have grown quickly and, collective­ly, have destroyed nearly 700 homes and other structures across the state.

 ?? AP Photo/Noah Berger ?? Hank Hanson, 81, gestures to the kitchen of his home, destroyed by the LNU Lightning Complex fires, in Vacaville, Calif., on Friday. Hanson, who built the house thirty years ago, does not think he will rebuild.
AP Photo/Noah Berger Hank Hanson, 81, gestures to the kitchen of his home, destroyed by the LNU Lightning Complex fires, in Vacaville, Calif., on Friday. Hanson, who built the house thirty years ago, does not think he will rebuild.

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