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May 22, 2014

OAK CREEK CANYON FIRE ARIZONA

May 22, 2014, 4:47 AM

Thousands more may be forced to evacuate ahead of fast-growing Arizona wildfire

Sun is obscured on May 21, 2014 by fast-growing wildfire in canyon between Sedona and Flagstaff, Ariz.  

KACHINA VILLAGE, Ariz. -- As smoke billowed over their homes, residents threatened by a growing Arizona wildfire filled their vehicles with clothes, heirlooms, medication, legal documents and family pictures. Many of them collectively gasped when they were told at a community meeting that a wildfire was approaching.
"I'm a Korean War veteran. There's not much that worries me," said 82-year-old Dick Summit, who decided to leave town and arranged to stay with a friend in nearby Flagstaff.
The blaze burning in a canyon between Sedona and Flagstaff dramatically increased in size Wednesday, serving as a reminder of the dangers facing Arizona amid a drought that has left its forests tinder-dry.
The fire grew to an estimated 7 square miles, or about 4,500 acres, and erratic and gusty winds grounded air tankers that were brought in to fight the fire. Authorities warned about 3,200 residents in two communities between Sedona and Flagstaff that they need to be ready to evacuate if the fire makes another advance.
"It's pretty bad, we're all ready," said Ken Patrick, a Flagstaff city worker whose home was among those threatened by the fire. "I don't know if we're going to wait for them to tell us to get out of here. It's a no-brainer."
Officials said late Wednesday that the blaze was zero percent contained,

  Elsewhere in this village of about 1,400 off Interstate 17, residents were clearing brush from their homes and hosing down the landscape. Search and rescue crews with the Coconino County Sheriff's Office were going door to door while pre-evacuation warnings were in place checking to see which residents were home and which weren't. For those who they knew were safe, they placed a yellow ribbon on their mailboxes.Just south, hundreds of firefighters battled the fire that began Tuesday afternoon. Officials said it was probably caused by humans.
The fire broke out at the start of the tourist season and closed the main road between Sedona and Flagstaff - two cities that attract many visitors in summer months. The fire is burning near Slide Rock State Park, a popular recreation area because of its natural rock water slides.
Sophie Lwin, of Peoria, said she had relatives from the Los Angeles area coming in for a weekend at the Butterfly Garden Inn, which had to evacuate because of the fire. She said the area is her favorite destination, and she and her husband visit the Sedona area at least five times a year.
"It's Memorial Day weekend. It's going to be so hard and so expensive to get anything anywhere else," she said.
About 500 firefighters and other personnel are already assigned to the fire, including 15 Hotshot crews, Coconino National Forest officials said Wednesday.
There were no reports so far of injuries or structures burned.
The fire forced the evacuations of 100 threatened businesses and homes in a 2-mile stretch north of the state park, and 15 people stayed at a shelter in Flagstaff.
As the fire moved up the canyon's steep walls, it sent up large amounts of smoke and ash and created hazy conditions in Flagstaff, about 15 miles from the blaze.
The blaze presented several challenges for firefighters, including steep terrain, thick pine forest, gusting winds and the drought conditions, said Bill Morse, a Flagstaff Fire Department captain and a spokesman for firefighting managers.
But Morse said calming fire conditions in Southern California have freed up extra crews to fight the Arizona fire.
"Fortunately the fires in San Diego have calmed down enough for the resources to be released here," Morse said.
The evacuees included Nathan and Mickella Westerfield, young honeymooners from Phoenix who arrived at a campground in the canyon Tuesday afternoon. They were headed into Sedona for dinner when they passed the fire, which was burning shrubs and trees in a small valley visible from the highway.
As other passers-by stopped to take pictures of the fire, a firefighter told the couple they couldn't return to their campground to retrieve their newly purchased camping gear and other belongings, Nathan Westerfield said.
"He told us, 'no, we're evacuating,'" he said. "We literally have the clothes on our backs."
Red Cross spokeswoman Trudy Thompson Rice said most of the 15 people who stayed Tuesday night at the shelter at a Flagstaff school were campers. The Westerfields were among those who spent the night at the shelter.
The fire comes less than a year after a blaze in nearby Prescott killed 19 firefighters who were part of a Hotshot crew.
A separate wildfire burned 200 acres and closed Interstate 17 near Cordes Junction in both directions for more than four hours late Tuesday. The interstate is the main route between the Phoenix area and northern Arizona.

Jul 10, 2013

May 23, 2013

Rich's Awesome Stories The Evil Gray Cloud

Hello fans friends and family we have a new song for you. this will also be on our next CD.
nothing recorded as of yet but here are the lyrics.

but first a little story behind the song.

many years ago there was a small town in the west that was not much different than all the other surrounding towns. what made this town different was what happened to it on one winter day in 1871.

unlike anything any one has ever seen, a massive cloud surrounded the entire town there was no storms anywhere but right over this town.

this storm was not like any other storm it was a very evil storm. this storm brought with it hatred and evil beyond all unimaginable proportions. this storm ripped the love and compassion from everyone's hearts. it left them empty and lost.

but when the three that were appointed were awakened by the fear in these towns peoples hearts they rode out as fast as they could to this town and seen unbelievable things that were going on within this town things one would never want to experience.

we immediately start to fight for this town we do everything we can to remove this ungodly presents. we face it head on and with peace and love emanated from our chests we defeat the cloud of evil. but not with out a cost to many lives.

Aug 7, 2012

Syria PM Riad Hijab defection


Syria PM Riad Hijab defection

Damaged buildings and vehicles in Aleppo (Shaam News Network/Reuters) 6 Aug 2012 Opposition activists report intense attacks on rebel-held areas of Aleppo
Syria's new cabinet has met in emergency session, after Prime Minister Riad Hijab defected and denounced Damascus's "terrorist regime".
The White House said the defection showed that President Bashar al-Assad's government was "crumbling from within".
But Information Minister Omran al-Zoubi said Mr Hijab had not appeared in person and he rejected reports of other ministerial defections.
Meanwhile, reports suggest the army has stepped up its bombardment of Aleppo.
Government forces are trying to dislodge rebel fighters who have taken control of some areas of Syria's second city.
Opposition activists report intense attacks on rebel-held areas on the north-east and south-west sides of the city.
State TV said troops had clashed with "terrorist groups" in several places, inflicting heavy losses and recapturing two police stations.
Further deaths were reported in Damascus on Tuesday and an unconfirmed report from Syrian rebels said three of 48 Iranians being held as hostages had been killed by army shelling.
The rebels have claimed that the Iranians, abducted from a bus in Damascus on Saturday, are members of the Revolutionary Guard. Tehran says they are pilgrims who had been heading for a Shia religious site.
Iran's Deputy Foreign Minister Hossein Amir Abdollahian has said it holds the US responsible for the group's safety.
He said the US was supporting "terrorist groups" and despatching weapons to Syria, and was therefore responsible for the lives of those abducted.
'Business as usual' Caretaker Prime Minister Omar Ghalawanji headed a cabinet meeting on Monday, stressing that all the ministers were there.

Riad Farid Hijab

Riad Hijab in 2008
  • Born in 1966 in Deir al-Zour, eastern Syria
  • Married with four children
  • Holds a PhD in agriculture
  • Joined the local branch of the Baath Party command in 1998
  • Named governor of the southern province of Qunaytira in 2008
  • Transferred to head the Latakia governorate around the time protests were first reported - credited in state media with negotiating an end to a sit-in
  • Appointed minister of agriculture on 14 April 2011
The BBC's Jim Muir, in neighbouring Lebanon, said state media were giving the impression of it being business as usual in Damascus.
Opposition activists said that apart from the prime minister, two other ministers had also defected and a third - Finance Minister Mohammad Jalilati - was arrested as he tried to escape.
But Syria's information minister played down the significance of Mr Hijab's departure and denied there had been further defections.
"We haven't heard anything from the former prime minister and he didn't appear on TV," Omran al-Zoubi was quoted as saying by Syrian state news agency Sana.
The finance minister was said to have given a phone interview saying he was still in his post and working from his office.
According to Sana, Religious Endowments Minister Mohammad Abdul-Sattar al-Sayyed also denied he had defected.
Syria was a state of institutions, the information minister said, and the flight of some of its individuals would not affect the state, however prominent they were.
'Safe location' Riad Hijab, appointed as prime minister less than two months ago, is the most prominent Syrian figure to defect so far.
Although his whereabouts are unclear, his spokesman appeared on al-Jazeera TV in neighbouring Jordan saying that the prime minister had fled Syria with his family and was in "a safe location".
"I have defected from the terrorist, murderous regime and [am] joining the holy revolution," ran Mr Hijab's statement read by his spokesman Mohammed el-Etri.
France said the Assad government was "doomed" and White House spokesman Jay Carney said such high-level defections signalled that President Assad's grip on power was "loosening".
"If he cannot maintain cohesion within his own inner circle, it reflects on his inability to maintain any following among the Syrian people that isn't brought about at the point of a gun," he said.