Trenton outside River Eagle Hobbies in Boonville |
The train station manager let Trenton come back behind the ticket counter and gave him a train coloring book and some crayons and he was quite impressed with the whole thing. Then we went by the train store in Boonville on the way back and bought a car for our N-scale train.
That Saturday (Nov 12) he and I were on the deck in the morning, and he wanted to build a fire in the chimnea. It was a bit chilly, so we did. And we let it burn ... it was down to just some black logs and a few flames, when Vicki decided we needed to take him to see her mother, drop by the grocery store, get him lunch and down for a nap. This was about 11:50 am. And I said "well, we'd better get going pretty quick, then".
I went into the kitchen and got a large plastic cup and filled it with water to pour over the fire to put it out. Started grabbing coats and things, and I peeked out and thought out loud that I thought I needed to do it again. Even Vicki thought it would be fine, but I still went back and filled the cup again and poured it over the logs. Got lots of steam and some smoke for a few seconds and then it subsided and I felt sure it was out. And we left.
Visited Vicki's mom for maybe a half hour, 45 minutes. Went to the grocery store, and drove home.
Fireman helping our neighbor Adele (this is from the paper) |
And then I saw another fire truck. And another. And one with a ladder sticking way out ....
over our house.
A little smoke in our driveway. |
A very nice woman in a fire suit whose job it obviously was to inform and calm homeowners and neighbors came to talk to us. She said they were still investigating the cause. Wanted to know if I left the grill going. I told her no, but I could tell her exactly what happened.
At the time I figured the wind, and it was very windy that day, blew the fire back up into viable flames and glowing cinders, flying in the wind, and that it caught leaves next to the house on fire. We have wood siding. And there were sofit vents up there for it to lick into the attic.
We weren't allowed to go in for at least an hour. We couldn't leave Trenton in the car -- it was too far down the road, but we needed to talk to the firemen, so I got him out and carried him over there. They gave him stickers. And he fell asleep on my shoulder.
Our first view inside |
Neighbors were milling about... hugging us, telling us how sorry they were, happy nobody was hurt.
The fire lady said that it was pretty bad, but it looked worse than it was. Gave me some Red Cross literature. Had me call my insurance company. We were both in a daze, and I just did it. I don't really remember much about it.
The firemen protected our belongings way beyond what I would have expected. |
Out on the deck was the chimnea, with the three logs still in it, not burning, pretty much the way I'd left them. There was a vertical hole in the kitchen wall. You could see where the fire had burned up the side of the house and the sofit and most of the roof over the kitchen was gone with the burnt remains of charred rafters hanging out, unsupported on one side.
Part of our extensive stash of Christmas decorations. |
All of this happened in 45 minutes?
It had to have been starting as we pulled out of the driveway.
The news reported that I had poured "2 cups" of water on the fire. Two of these is closer to a half gallon. |
Well, there was a tiki torch there near the house and it likely fell over into the fire at some point. And then when it burned through the plastic bin all our barbecue stuff was in, there was probably another 3 quarts of torch oil. That helped. And the wind. The wind was a big factor.
Kitchen a day or two later. |
The firemen said they'd be back around 9:00pm to double-check that everything was really OUT out. But right about sunset the guy doing the tarp on the roof noticed some smoldering in the attic over the kitchen. It was in some of that blown insulation (which I've always wondered about) that seems to be nothing but ground newspaper. It apparently holds a coal very well. They called the fire department back, and they went in and tore into the kitchen sofit area and got the rest of it. The guys were very professional, but nice and sympathetic at the same time. Seriously our hats are off to those guys.
It is amazing how little in the house itself was damaged directly by the fire. The fire crew had also taken care to take pictures off of walls, cookbooks off of the top of the cabinet, furniture out of that kitchen area, and covered everything with huge blue tarps to keep the water, insulation, and drywall off of the furniture and just about everything else. They did a fantastic job -- way more than either of us ever expected from any fire department. They'd moved my guitars from the wall downstairs and the living room into the bedroom ... the only room upstairs where there was virtually no visible damage from the fire or the water.
At first, before we went in, I thought "oh, just a couple of days, and we can live in it while it's being fixed."
I wondered at first if it could be fixed by Christmas.
Most of the actual fire damage was in the attic, and the worst of it is that we store all of our Christmas decorations up there, and they were a near total loss. If you know us, you know we put a lot of effort into decorating for Christmas. Most of that stuff can be replaced. Some of it, old stuff from Vicki's childhood and family... cannot. (a footnote ... a few items actually survived. I dug through melted plastic and ashes for it, and surprised us).
Most of the actual fire damage was in the attic, and the worst of it is that we store all of our Christmas decorations up there, and they were a near total loss. If you know us, you know we put a lot of effort into decorating for Christmas. Most of that stuff can be replaced. Some of it, old stuff from Vicki's childhood and family... cannot. (a footnote ... a few items actually survived. I dug through melted plastic and ashes for it, and surprised us).
What a mess. |
We grabbed some clothes and toiletries. Vicki's jewelry. The guns from the safe. And headed across town to Brian and Kristin's house.
Damn. The carpet's going to need replacing. We're going to have to clear out the house if they're taking the roof off. That's going to be a lot of work. It'll be like moving! Then we'll have to store all of it. And where are we going to live for that period of time?
Ironically, this survived in the attic. I found it in the debris on the deck. We had to keep it. |
Vicki was retiring the following Friday. She wondered how that was going to work with the stuff we thought we were going to have to do, but I guessed (correctly) that there wasn't much we could do in the next week anyway. I met with the adjuster from American Family. Nice guy. And I was stunned at what our insurance actually covered. I guess my agent steered me right.
They get Service Master and ServPro to bid on mitigation and cleanup. They also move your stuff out, clean it, and store it, and bring it back and put it basically back where it was ("like it never even happened", the ServPro commercial goes). A general contracting company or construction company comes in and fixes it up in the time being.
The adjuster gave me the names of three companies. Two of them in "their program" -- which basically means they meet certain standards and use the same estimating software and work together. A third used to be in their program and probably would be in it again, too.
One company intrigued me. A local (central Missouri) company called Aerodry ("in" the program) that would do it end to end from mitigation to cleanup, moving, and storage to construction. If they bid against the other two companies and got the mitigation/cleanup end, I could work with one single company through the whole thing.
Roof being put on. It's actually done now. |
Due to weather, it took them a long time to get started on the roof. In the mean time, I had a lot of trouble sleeping, worrying what about this, what about that, what if .... I wasn't sleeping at all. I got a perscription for Ambien for a few weeks. That helped.
They've been very good to work with. They also use a lot of local small businesses, and everyone I've met seems like good people. Things are moving along. I expect about another 5 weeks. Longer than we expected. But still. I've heard of much worse.
Sky through the new rafters. |
I can see the light at the end of the tunnel.
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