Yeah, I usually go out in the morning, drive up and down the streets, make sure everyone’s okay, make sure everyone has water. I grew up here since I was little, born and raised, and I don’t even recognize these streets. Everyone must evacuate. But I was still here. The next thing you know, our eyes were cherry red. Then my nephew appeared. I thought we should come here and start putting water on the houses. So we started watering the neighboring house. Firefighters appeared out of nowhere. And luckily, between the five of us, we managed to pull it off. I’m one of the lucky ones, thankfully, but it’s my neighbors, man. Like this is huge. How are we doing, folks. They barricaded everything and then they told us – “Hey, you people can’t go out or come in anymore.” All they did was tell us that if you cross the line, you can’t come back. They are very verbal about it. We have a burner there. We’ll make coffee right away. We have a couple of generators if we need them. Our children, our family, our nieces, our nephew. Everyone just comes to us. I think around 12, it gets really dark here. So at night, I come here around midnight, bundle up, climb to the top, sit in a chair and just look at the lamps. At that time you call the sheriff, have them come out and look at it. All you can do is lock everything up and just pray.







