201811.12
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As Woolsey fire burned his home, firefighters rescued his most valued possession: images of his unborn son

by in News

His hillside home smoldered but a handful of memories were spared.

As Shane Clark assessed his newly incinerated Bell Canyon property on Saturday, Nov. 10 – one of more than a dozen houses leveled in his community by the aggressive, wind-fueled Woolsey fire – four pieces of paper offered solace.

Thoughtful firefighters snagged many of the 28-year-old accountant’s belongings, including his most important possession: four ultrasound images of Clark’s unborn son. First responders nabbed them off the fridge right before flames engulfed the home and made sure they wound up with Clark.

“These are the only copies we have,” Clark said, as firefighters sprayed water on spot fires on and near his property.

“We can rebuild, but the things they were able to take out were more valuable than the structure itself.

“I’m very thankful.”

Over the weekend, the windswept inferno ate 91,500 acres, displaced 265,000 people in Los Angeles and Ventura counties, and destroyed 370 structures.

Some 20 of the homes leveled by the fire, including Clark’s, were in Bell Canyon, an affluent hillside community in eastern Ventura County. Chimneys and stone masonry stood bare next to charred cars. Live gas lines burned freely, shooting flames into the air. A noxious smell of burnt plastic pervaded.

Clark’s cul-de-sac was particularly hard hit. His neighbor to the north, the former keyboardist for David Bowie, lost his home. Across the street, another neighbor’s house disappeared into an avalanche of smoking debris, leaving nothing but 20-foot sheer cliff where a driveway used to be.

Clark and his five-months-pregnant wife and their two dogs had fled quickly under evacuation orders at 2 p.m. Friday, leaving everything behind. By 4 p.m., he was at a friend’s home, watching live helicopter footage of his block burning.

But the fire engulfed his neighbors’ homes first. And the fact that his home was the last on the cul-de-sac to go down allowed firefighters to save some of Clark’s possessions, though the blaze was then too powerful to be slowed.

  • With his burned down home smoldering in the background, Shane Clark, at right, gets some help from his dad, Ben, as they load a toolbox that was saved by firefighters into the bed of a truck in the Bell Canyon neighborhood of West Hills on Saturday, November 10, 2018. The Woolsey Fire burned through the area on Friday. (Photo by Kevin Sullivan, Orange County Register/SCNG)

  • Shane Clark holds the ultrasounds of his unborn child that were saved off of his refrigerator door by Los Angeles firefighters in the Bell Canyon neighborhood of West Hills on Saturday, November 10, 2018. His wife Clair is 5-months pregnant with their first child, a boy. The Woolsey Fire burned through the area on Friday. (Photo by Kevin Sullivan, Orange County Register/SCNG)

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  • Shane Clark peers into the lower floor of his gutted home in the Bell Canyon neighborhood of West Hills on Saturday, November 10, 2018. L.A. City firefighters were able to save several items from his house including the ultrasounds of his unborn child off of his refrigerator door. The Woolsey Fire burned through the area on Friday. (Photo by Kevin Sullivan, Orange County Register/SCNG)

  • Los Angeles Firefighter Cole Mason, of Station 73 in Reseda, hoses down Shane Clark’s gutted home in the Bell Canyon neighborhood of West Hills on Saturday, November 10, 2018. (Photo by Kevin Sullivan, Orange County Register/SCNG)

  • Shane Clark’s home burns as his dad Keith helps get some of his belongings that were saved by firefighters on Hitching Post Lane after the Woolsey fire swept through the Bell Canyon neighborhood of West Hills on Saturday, November 10, 2018 . (Photo by Kevin Sullivan, Orange County Register/SCNG)

  • Los Angeles Firefighter Cole Mason, of Station 73 in Reseda, hoses down Shane Clark’s gutted home in the Bell Canyon neighborhood of West Hills on Saturday, November 10, 2018. (Photo by Kevin Sullivan, Orange County Register/SCNG)

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Along with the ultrasounds, the firefighters rescued Clark’s tennis racquets, tool chest, surfboard, and bicycles, pulling them to the driveway.

On Saturday afternoon, Clark and his dad loaded the belongings into his father’s cobalt blue 1950 Chevy truck and hauled them to Clark’s childhood home, a half-mile away on an adjacent hillside.

Clark was already thinking about his family’s next moves. He’s staying with friends for now, but soon he’ll file insurance claims, find a rental house, and begin the task of rebuilding on his land. He said he’ll be thankful to have some fixtures from the old place, including the fuzzy images of his unborn son.

As Clark put it: “All the little things that make it a home.”