Wildfires Blue Mountain Eagle Friends save home LQPLGGOHRI¿UH Wednesday, August 19, 2015 A7 ASSAULT FIRE BY AIR AND GROUND By Angel Carpenter Blue Mountain Eagle Sam Palmer, of Sene- ca, who lost three houses in the Canyon Creek Com- plex, helped to save his best friend¶s home. The deck of Tad Houpt¶s home, a half-mile up the can- yon near Canyon City, had caught on ¿re. Palmer and a friend headed up to Houpt¶s home. “We used buckets at ¿rst then got a generator going and used a garden hose to pump water out of a pond,´ Palmer said. “We were in the mid- dle of it — there was a lot of wind, heat, ash and ¿re.´ He said at one point it felt the winds were blowing near- ly 100 mph. We kept at it until we got it,´ Palmer said. Meanwhile, Houpt, who has a broken leg, had headed away from the ¿re. He tried to Àag his friend down when he passed them, then turned around when they didn¶t stop. “I got to the bridge (to my house), and there was no way Tammy Clark captured this shot of a fire retardant drop Sunday afternoon, Aug. 16. As weather conditions allow, crews put on a massive attack to the Canyon Creek Complex fire by air, with water and retardant drops, as well as by ground throughout the weekend, Aug. 14-16. Officials report 26 residences and over 100 structures have been destroyed. Nearly 575 crews are working the fire, which as of Tuesday, Aug. 18, is over 43,000 acres. Contributed photo/Yao Hui Huang Tad Houpt, left, and Sam Palmer have been business partners and best friends for a long time. Last week, Palmer helped save Houpt’s home from the Canyon Creek Complex fire. to get across,´ Houpt said. He says he¶s glad they saved his house, “but I¶m re- ally glad that they made it.´ “Sam¶s been my best friend since we were 3 or 4 years old,´ he said. “As much as the house is worth, nothing is better than that.´ ‘We’re rising from the ashes’ Jason Wright’s family owns only the clothes on their backs By Nancy McCarthy Blue Mountain Eagle JOHN DAY — Jason Wright piled socks, under- wear, jeans and shirts in a shopping cart in the Pavilion building at the county fair- grounds Monday. The cloth- ing — all donated — signaled the start of a new life. Wright and his family were in Pendleton when ¿re en- gulfed the Sheep Creek home they had rented for six years. “We got a call at 11:30 Friday from a neighbor and he told me, ‘Your house is on ¿re, and there¶s no rea- son to come back,¶ ´ Wright said. “, didn¶t get my pictures of my daughter. I lost my pick- up and four-wheeler. The only thing we had was the clothes on our backs,´ Wright said. His wife, Aimee Wright, and daughter, Carle, are stay- ing in a ¿fth-wheeler offered to them by a local friend. He described the experi- ence in one word: “traumat- ic.´ Yet, Wright, who has lived here since he was 2 years old, has nothing but praise for the community. “I have to brag on the people around here,´ Wright said. “The way people are coming together is unbeliev- able. It¶s making me so happy to see what the community can do while going through so many changes.´ Only one of Wright¶s neighbors¶ homes was saved, he said. “God must have been watching her house. It¶s still standing,´ added Wright, who thanked the ¿re¿ghters. He looked over the clothes in his shopping cart and sighed. “We¶re rising from the ashes, literally.´ By Angel Carpenter Blue Mountain Eagle CANYON CITY – While Bryan Nelson credited Mike Mannell for saving his house, Mike Mannell, in turn, praised another friend for saving Mannell¶s life. “At 11 a.m., we were at a /evel 3 evacuation,´ Mannell said. “I hadn¶t been noti¿ed or listening to the radio. I had laid down for a nap at 10 a.m.´ At 11 a.m. a friend of mine from Mt. Vernon, Jeff Comp- ton, a former U.S. Army ranger who spent three years in IraT, came up to check on me.´ By Angel Carpenter Blue Mountain Eagle The Eagle Nancy McCarthy Jason Wright collects donated clothing from the Pavilion. Fire destroyed the house that he and his family rented for six years. Nelson calls his friend a ‘hero’ By Nancy McCarthy Blue Mountain Eagle Contributed photo/Bryan Nelson Although a portion of Bryan Nelson’s property was scorched, the fire didn’t reach his house, barn and outbuildings. Nelson credits neighbor Mike Mannell for saving the structures. away; the house was empty. “He turned the sprinklers on, he grabbed his guns,´ and he Àed, Nelson said. Mike Mannell’s friend woke him up as fire approached He woke me up and told me the ¿re was behind my property up on the ridge, head- ing my way,´ he said. “Had he not come by and woke me up, I probably would have per- ished in the ¿re that day.´ My wife Ginny was at work that day,´ he said. “Jeff came back an hour later — I gathered all my guns out of the cabin — at the ¿- nal minute, I ran through the smoke to save my Harley Da- vidson and parked it at Bry- an Nelson¶s house next door under a sprinkler, and put a sprinkler on his house.´ As a Vietnam veteran, U.S. Marines, Mannell said he feels, “the brotherhood is alive and well — that¶s the truth.´ He added, “I want to give my friend Jeff Compton credit for saving my life — he¶s my brother.´ Berry Creek Ranch home saved Neighbor saves one house but loses his own Bryan Nelson gets tears in his eyes when he thinks about his neighbor¶s loss. He calls Mike Mannell a “hero.´ “He was building his house — a two-story cabin on Canyon Creek — for six years. It was his retirement dream home,´ Nelson said. When the Can- yon Creek Complex ¿re hit the canyon, Nelson, who owns a house that he rents to tenants, was away. But Mannell was there. “That day of the ¿re, he said the wind came up and there was a wall of ¿re coming right down the canyon,´ Nelson said. Mannell ran to turn the sprin- klers on at Nelson¶s house. The latest tenant had just moved One vet saves another¶s life Mannell¶s nearly completed house, which he had built him- self, burned to the ground. Nel- son¶s house survived. “He saved my house,´ Nel- son said, pausing a bit to catch his composure. “I¶m sure it helped. He had kept it mowed down all around it, and it was green.´ Although the ¿re approached the house, nothing burned, not even the outbuildings. “Everything was saved,´ Nelson said. In addition to his house, Mannell¶s two antiTue cars, the camper he stayed in, a chicken house, two tractors and a horse trailer were destroyed. His hors- es survived. Mannell is going to stay at Nelson¶s rental house for now, Nelson said. Nelson displayed some photos he shot in the ¿re¶s af- termath. His barn and house are in the shot, with a patch of scorched earth in the forefront. Nelson shook his head at what could have been, had it not been for Mannell. “He¶s a hero,´ Nelson said. CANYON CITY — Gor- don and Julie /arson¶s home in the canyon at their Berry Creek Ranch was saved, but they lost three barns to the Aug. 1 ¿re. “I¶m so sorry for every- one who lost their homes,´ Larson said. He¶s a retired Oregon State Police lieutenant and had worked as OSP sergeant in John Day for several years. His wife, Julie, works at John Day City Hall. He recalled a young ¿re- ¿ghter who had to be packed out of the area. A medical helicopter Àew him out. “I know those ¿re¿ghters worked their tails off un- til midnight to get that out — the wind came through there,´ he said. Airman loses home to ¿re ‘There are no words,’ said James Dunn By Angel Carpenter Blue Mountain Eagle CANYON CITY — James Dunn, an active-duty airman, was coming home from Mich- igan, where he is stationed, when he heard about the Can- yon Creek Complex ¿re. On Thursday, Highway 26 was closed at Ontario, so he stayed the night there. He came home Friday, but the ¿rst time he was able to see the Canyon City home where his wife, Judy, lives, was last Sunday. It was destroyed. “There¶s no words to de- scribe the devastation,´ he said. “The past 30 years, they haven¶t logged or cleared, and won¶t let us gra]e cattle — it worked all those previous years.´ O FFICIALS POST INFORMATION 5HWLUHHV¿QGKRPHLVVDIHDQGWKHFDW Julie Reynolds: ‘It sounded like a jet engine’ By Angel Carpenter Blue Mountain Eagle On Aug. 14, Julie and Dennis Reynolds heard through the grapevine that their home, beyond J-L, had been destroyed in the Canyon Creek Complex ¿re. The rumor, however, wasn¶t true. “We were very fortu- nate,´ Julie said. “We have neighbors who did lose their home.´ The day of the ¿re, they had little time to get out. “We could see it coming up over the hills — it sound- ed like a jet engine,´ she said. They left their cat, Harry, behind. “We all joined hands in prayer and just prayed for the home and safety for others,´ she said, adding they left at about 1 p.m. When they returned to the property, they saw the ¿re had stopped at the paved road in front of their home and at Canyon Creek in the back yard. “I couldn¶t believe it,´ she said. They called out to their cat who was hiding in some bushes, safe. Shoppers check the Canyon Creek Complex fire information board set up by Forest Service officials at Chester’s Thriftway in John Day. U.S. Forest Service officials have posted an information board on the Canyon Creek Complex fire at Chester’s Thriftway in John Day. More information boards are planned for Mt. Vernon and Prairie City.