'This is our home': Napa County wildfire evacuees in Pope Valley deal with loss, uncertainty

ByAnser Hassan & Krissan Chasarik KGO logo
Thursday, August 20, 2020
Napa Co. wildfire evacuees in deal with loss, uncertainty
On Wednesday, Napa County Sheriff's deputies cruised through Pope Valley helping with evacuation orders. Carlos Vazquez and his family have lived in Pope Valley since 1984. They were evacuated two years ago, but he says this time feels different.

NAPA COUNTY, Calif. (KGO) -- On Wednesday, Napa County sheriff's deputies cruised through Pope Valley helping with evacuation orders.

Carlos Vazquez and his family have lived in Pope Valley since 1984. They were evacuated two years ago. He says this time it's different.

"All the years I have lived here in the valley, we have never had lightning storms," said Vazquez. "Monday morning, the lighting came down and it was just all over the valley here."

RELATED: Vacaville family flees home overnight as Hennessey Fire inched closer: 'We just grabbed a bunch of clothes and jumped in the truck'

He thought they may have been safe until this new fire sparked on the hillside close to where they live.

Mitchell Busse and his family of four were evacuated on Monday. They live near Lake Hennessey. He came back Wednesday trying to find out the condition of his house.

Follow developments with our exclusive Wildfire Tracker that's updated with the latest information from CAL FIRE every hour. Check in to see where fires are spreading, the acres burned, and see containment information in real-time.

App users: For a better experience, click here to view the full map in a new window

"It's crazy," said Busse. "Just worried about our house that we have lived in the past three years. It's everything we've got."

RELATED: Track wildfires across San Francisco Bay Area, other parts of California with this interactive map

Vazquez has similar concerns.

"I mean, this is our home," he said. "This is where we live. If this goes up, what is next? I can't afford to live anywhere else. I mean were are out here in the country where it is affordable still."

Vazquez works as a maintenance engineer at a local vineyard. He says this is the middle of the harvest. If the grapes are destroyed, so is his only source of income.

"There is a vineyard up the street we can't even pick right now. And if those grapes go bad, I mean, right now the sugar level is perfect for us to pick. It's going to cost something."

Get the latest updates and videos on the CZU, LNU and SCU Lightning Complex Fires here.

RELATED STORIES & VIDEOS:

  • How to prepare for a wildfire evacuation
  • Most destructive California wildfires in history
  • Camp Fire is deadliest wildfire in California history
  • How are wildfires started? A look at the causes of some of the worst in California history
  • Safety tips to remember when returning home after wildfire