Many thanks from all of you, especially thanks to Sandi (who very kindly telephoned me), Velda (who offered me a place to evacuate to, if need be!) and to Karen who PM'd me to express her concern (and encourage me to get my KF move on!), and also to Beth, Sheila, Judy, Barbie, Sue. I had not visited the Forum since early yesterday, so had not read the "fire" posts.
All of your concern is appreciated more than you know. As a single woman, WomenRV provides a kind of "lifeline", that keeps me tethered to a community (and to the wonderful travel/RV information member's so willingly and selflessly provide).
I am at home, and I am safe. I actually live closer to Marysville than to Oroville, which puts me about 30 - 40 miles from the location of the fire. There is a lot of smoke here, but not so much as in the San Francisco Bay area, which has received a lot more smoke from this fire than I have. My son, who lives in the South Bay, phoned me yesterday to be sure that I was safe, and he said that the smoke where he lives (about 150 miles south-west of the fire!) is very bad, with poor visibility, respiratory irritation, and burning eyes. Where I am it is still fairly clear, so the winds are carrying the smoke away from me.
I sincerely hope that what is being said about Paradise is an exaggeration, and not fully true. Paradise is a beautiful foothill city/town (I have visited there many times, it is fairly close to me when I want to "go for a drive"). However, it is not a valley town, but is located a ways up into the Sierra foothills - and thus the town itself is surrounded by wildland. This makes it at risk for this kind of wildland fire.
Parts of the city of Chico abut the foothills also (which means that the city limits abut against wildland) which puts the outskirts of the city of Chico at risk also. I have heard on the news this morning that California State University at Chico has closed today, because of the fire. Not good news.
We have not had any appreciable rain here since April (seven months). This is fairly normal for my part of California. Temps have been mostly 100 degrees plus, (many days topping out at 110 - 112) almost every day from about June until mid-August. September and October temps have generally still reached the lower to mid-90's. Last week or so have been in the upper 80's, still with no rain in sight (rains usually begin in mid to late October - not this year - we are still waiting).
Everything (especially in the foothills, where Paradise is located) is so dry that all it takes to start a fire is a piece of metal striking a rock, and causing a spark. Lawnmowers striking a rock in dry grass have started fires here more than once.
The way that the major Redding fire of a month or so ago started was from a flat tire on an RV, when the rim created sparks when striking the pavement, and the sparks shooting off the side of the road into the dry grass.
Scary time, for sure.
Pray for rain. Or maybe Martha can just send some our way! What do you say, Martha?
Thank you to all of you, and special thanks to Beth for creating this forum. It is amazing - and comforting - to feel that I somehow "belong".
My very best wishes to you all,
Anne
PS. Just visited the main "go-to" website for fire information in my area:
https://yubanet.com/Fires/camp/It seems that the fire has just jumped in size from 20,000 acres to 70,000 acres just overnight. The fire has only been burning for little more than one day. Looking at the map posted there, it seems the fire has now reached the outskirts of Chico. Bad news, indeed.
2nd PS. It seems that most telephone lines in the area are now down - mostly Oroville, but likely parts of Chico also. The Butte County website (the fire is located in Butte County) is offline. Likely the server has crashed with people trying to log on to find out fire information (the CalFire website references the Butte County website for those seeking information on road closures and evacuation centers - with the Butte County website crashed, this leaves little option of places to find info). Phone lines down and major local source of fire information (location of fire, location of evacuation centers, information on road closures) now unavailable to those being affected by the fire.