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To: RightGeek
Enhanced version


525 posted on 11/17/2018 4:59:12 PM PST by RightGeek (FUBO and the donkey you rode in on)
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To: RightGeek

More Trump and fire photos at https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-6399991/California-searches-1-000-missing-deadliest-fire.html


529 posted on 11/17/2018 5:04:42 PM PST by RightGeek (FUBO and the donkey you rode in on)
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To: RightGeek

God bless those children.


537 posted on 11/17/2018 5:46:31 PM PST by Rusty0604
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To: RightGeek

The enhanced photo is awesome.


543 posted on 11/17/2018 5:59:13 PM PST by pax_et_bonum (Never Forget the SEALs of Extortion 17 - and God Bless The USA and President Trump.)
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To: RightGeek
Conservative blogger Gerard Van Der Leun was raised in Paradise, CA and had gone back there to retire. He got out just ahead of the fire and his blog now has a combination of evacuation life notes and memories. https://americandigest.org/

One post I particularly liked was about an apple orchard that he enjoyed as a child. https://americandigest.org/wp/the-orchard-at-the-end-of-paradise/. Here's an excerpt:

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And when I returned to Paradise Noble Orchards were, in all senses of the term, the last orchard in Paradise. All the others were gone, taken by relentless changes in the orchard business. But the Nobles were still there, their green stone house still there, the Willys Jeep still there. Unchanged and unchanging.

Yesterday morning I met the Nobles again in the long line for FEMA signups at the Baptist Church and shelter. There they were. They were, to my joy, there and alive.

And they had nothing… or next to nothing.

With a self-possession I don’t think I could muster, the Nobles told me they’d lost all the buildings at the orchards and barely got out. They drove and ran and drove themselves through the tunnel of fire on the Skyway and emerged into the life-giving blue skies and your deliverance. Their family all lived. Even their two dogs, who they thought lost, were rescued by the Highway Patrol at the last moment.

And now the Nobles stood in line at the FEMA offices trying, at something near my age, to start again.

“So,” I asked, “Is it all gone? Is the green stone house gone?”

“It’s all gone,” Mr. Noble said. “All except the trees. The orchard survived.”

“What? How’s that possible?”

“My trees were still all green and full of leaves and fruit. There was a fire break I put in years ago and have been improving. When the fire got to our place there was no easy food to be had from my apple trees. They were too moist and out of reach. The fire went around them. My trees are still there. The orchard made it.”

We stood in the cold morning wind in the South Baptist Church out on 99. He had on a plaid shirt that he’d picked up at some local pile of clothing and a coat over the top of that. It was what he had. Mrs. Noble stood next to him wrapped in a thick and heavy sweater. It was what she had.

A man came out of the snug and warm FEMA offices where they were beginning to accept applications for relief. He said, “They’re only taking applications from people in shelters. The rest of you will have to come back tomorrow.” Mr. and Mrs. Noble took that bit of bureaucratic blather in with the shrug and quiet thoughtful look of those who are getting used to the long nightmare their efforts to reclaim and rebuild the work of four generations of Nobles on their land.

“What will you do?” I asked Mr. Noble.

“We don’t know yet. But my trees are still there. When we can back into our orchard I’m going to start working so that, next November, the will be a fresh crop of Paradise apples. Did I tell you the old Jeep probably made it? I had it parked out in the middle of the orchard. Yes,” he said, “next year we just might be able to get a new crop in. God willing.”

643 posted on 11/18/2018 7:37:58 AM PST by RightGeek (FUBO and the donkey you rode in on)
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To: RightGeek
For the laughs:


927 posted on 11/19/2018 7:57:04 AM PST by RightGeek (FUBO and the donkey you rode in on)
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