Times-Call (Longmont)

Firefighte­r’s handwritte­n note generates gratitude and joy

- BY KIERAN NICHOLSON THE DENVER POST

A handwritte­n note left by a firefighte­r who helped save a home from the East Troublesom­e fire has lead to an outpouring of joy and gratitude on social media.

Daniel Stones on Sunday evening posted the note left behind by a fire crew who save his home, just of f U.S. 36 about halfway between Granby and

Grand Lake, from the devouring flames of the second-largest wildfire in Colorado histor y.

It read: “If this note finds you we must have done something right. Sorry for the loss of your shed and we had to cut a little of your wood fence, to save your house. Things got really hot we stayed as long as possible.” Best wishes, Engine 1446, Meeker, Co.

On Sunday, Stones responded to the note on Twitter: “We got your note. Inside the burn line and saved. Forever in your debt and with tears of gratitude. You are truly SUPERHEROE­S. Words do no justice. THANK YOU.”

On Monday afternoon, Stones’ tweet had more than 3,000 likes, 560 retweets and 200 quote tweets.

The tweet had a long line of replies with expression­s of congratula­tions and joy, along with hear tfelt gratitude for firefighte­rs. Some replies talked of shared fears, losing a home, and some mentioned homes lost.

“That is so cool. Greetings from a neighbor on CR-4571 up the road. (My house also probably sur vived.),” said Jules Zane on Twitter.

“Incredible … these firefighte­rs like @Meekerfire are some of the most honorable, brave and thoughtful humans I’ve ever seen. Thank you for sharing this,” said CG @cganilo.

Stones replied to many of the comments in the long thread.

Kyle Frar y, a wildland firefighte­r with U.S. Bureau of Land Management based out of Meeker, left the note.

Frar y, who was getting some much-deser ved rest on Monday at home, in par t because of the Sunday snowstorm that knocked the raging fire down, downplayed the note and his role in saving Stones’ home.

“We don’t do this job for any recognitio­n or anything like that,” Frar y said. “We are just doing our job that we get paid to do.”

Frar y, 36 and a wildland firefighte­r for 18 years, said he was with two other crew members on Thursday, an incredibly raging day for the fire when it grew about 170,000 acres, along U.S. 36 where they were working on structure protection.

“It was so dark in there from the smoke laying over it, it was hard to see anything,” Frar y recalled. “Basically, we were going from one house to the next tr ying to save each place.”

The crew had a hose around the home, a twostor y house with a deck, tr ying to keep the flames away.

“As the fire got super hot, we had to pull out,” Frar y said. The crew went “downhill” to a safe spot and watched the fire sweep through the area.

“When we felt it was safe for our crew to go back in, that is what we did,” Frar y said.

They went back to the house and put out a shed that had caught fire. The crew also pulled a section of the deck apar t, because it had caught fire, and detaching the decking kept the flames from spreading to the house.

“There was a wood fence and landscapin­g material on fire right next to the house,” Frar y said. “We had get rid of that, knock it out and cut it away.”

On Monday, Frar y said he was “resting up and doing really good.”

And he’s now ready to go whereever the demanding, dangerous job calls him next.

“We’ll wait and see,” Frar y said. “We can go anywhere in the countr y. We go where we are needed next.”

 ?? Handout / Maxartech ?? This satellite image released by Maxar Technologi­es shows a view of the dense smoke spreaded by the East Troublesom­e Fire on Thursday in Grand Lake.
Handout / Maxartech This satellite image released by Maxar Technologi­es shows a view of the dense smoke spreaded by the East Troublesom­e Fire on Thursday in Grand Lake.

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