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Grasswire2

(13,571 posts)
Thu Sep 17, 2020, 03:28 PM Sep 2020

Check out this wild, wild story of survival on a rock in the river (Oregon fire)

[link:https://www.statesmanjournal.com/story/news/2020/09/16/oregon-wildfires-update-beachie-creek-fire-man-survives-sheltering-river/5799768002/?fbclid=IwAR2iIXEeIiYmWMOjji1FV6NZmdfqLHj4jVbRKXPNYUDvc2DX11H1jB8hTRQ|


(snip)

“The flames were pretty close to the house — within 100 yards,” he said. He got back in the car and started driving. But after running into more logs, and feeling the flames closing in, he thought: “Don, you’ve got to pull over and get the hell down to the river and under the bridge.”

Under the bridge, a green chair and a Rolling Rock
Myron headed off the road and under a concrete bridge, where he was up to his waist in water.

“I just hung out there for about an hour,” he said. It was about 11 p.m. “All of a sudden, I started noticing all the vegetation under the bridge was starting on fire. I had to get out."

He headed downstream, to a place the river widened, and came across three plastic chairs sitting on the side of the river. He grabbed one. Then he saw a 24-pack of Rolling Rock beer.

"I thought: 'What are the chances there's any left," he said. Sure enough, there was exactly one beer. He grabbed that, too. It was going to be a long night.

Don Myron, of Elkhorn, took these photos of the Beachie Creek Fire in the Little North Santiam Canyon the evening of Monday, Sept. 7, and morning of Tuesday, Sept. 8. He took them while sheltering along the Little North Fork.
Armed with a green chair and brew, in the middle of the river, Myron wondered what his next move would be.

“I looked upstream and saw a ledge of rock jetting out into the middle of the river that looked like a good spot,” he said. “So I crossed the river to this ledge. And then the winds just came at me.”

Wind speeds, which have been estimated at 70 mph or higher, funneled down the canyon, blasting Myron with ember showers as the entire forest became a pulsing wall of flames.

“When the wind really kicked up, I picked up the chair and held it in front of me,” he said. “That chair was incredible. It helped a lot.”

When the winds died down, he sat on the chair on his rock peninsula, trying to stay awake as the firestorm ebbed and flowed.

As for the beer?

“Hell yeah I drank it,” Myron said.

Getting oxygen
After a few hours, Myron started to feel OK — as though he might make it. But he soon realized the air was getting so smoky he was concerned about breathing.

“That was the one thing I was really unsure about it,” he said. “Am I getting enough oxygen?”

He put his t-shirt over his mouth and noticed that the air appeared cleaner along the surface of the water.

“There was a couple foot buffer between the smoke and the water,” he said. “The key was to stay down low, next to the water, and breathe through the t-shirt.”

Slowly, Myron started seeing light. At first he thought it was another flare-up. But the night had raced past. It was 7 a.m. and dawn was breaking. So was the fire.


“It had subsided some. The flames weren't going crazy the way it had been all night,” he said. Myron crossed the river and climbed back to his car — which, to his amazement, was still intact, and even started. He drove forward, clinking on the flat tire toward the Elkhorn Golf Course. He looked around and began to understand the devastation.

“The fire leveled everything,” he said. “Good friends and neighbors' houses were demolished.”

There were a few houses that made it, he said, in surprising spots.

He sat in his car in shock, for maybe an hour. Then, since the wind was quiet, he decided to check on his home. He walked up the road and saw a neighbor's house had survived. But when he arrived at his place, “it was completely leveled.”

He walked back down the road to his car, fully expecting to spend another day in the canyon trapped by the downed trees.

“It was around 2 p.m. when I saw three sets of emergency lights, and let me tell you, that was an awesome sight,” he said. “These big rigs cleared the road.”

A terrified family prepares for action
Chris Myron had seen his dad recently — just hours before the firestorm began. But now it seemed like an eternity, as he listened to the chaos and mayhem on the Marion County scanner as flames ravaged the Santiam Canyon.

"I just sat up all night listening to it. Didn't sleep at all," Chris Myron said. "I could tell it was really bad. I knew people had died and there was a chance he didn't make it."

By morning, still without information, Chris and his older brother Nick decided to take action.

They put together a crew and got two trucks, three chainsaws and lots of water. They formed a plan to get past the roadblocks on Highway 22 and charge into the Little North Canyon to save their father.

"We were in the process of hugging our mom and girlfriends goodbye," Chris said. "We're literally leaving the driveway when I saw my brother's girlfriend on the phone. Then I saw her jaw drop."

It was their dad, calling from Stayton.

"My brother and I freaked out," Chris said. "I couldn't believe it. We cried and hugged for a solid minute.

"Then we went to go get our dad."

News:Map traces current fires burning across Oregon in real-time

Looking back
In looking back, Myron said it was plenty of luck, plus knowing the river and having spent a lot of time outdoors that saved him.

Luck, in that if those trees hadn’t stopped him, he likely would have driven directly into a firestorm that absolutely torched the area near Highway 22 and North Fork Road, leveling the Oregon Department of Forestry building and North Fork Crossing late Monday night.

The bodies of two people were found in a burnt-out car in the same location Myron would have been heading.

He said knowing the area — the spots on the river and landmarks, plus being physically able, also made all the difference.

Oregon Wildfires:How the tiny Beachie Creek Fire blew up and ravaged the Santiam Canyon

“Thank God I ended up in a wide spot of the river and away from the banks,” he said. “Closer to the banks, the trees, branches, fire and boulders would have pummeled me.”

In the future, he said, he would heed warnings when they came. And at some point, he figured he'd have to repay his neighbors for borrowing their patio furniture.

“I suppose I should get them a new chair,” he said with a laugh.

Zach Urness has been an outdoors reporter, photographer and videographer in Oregon for 12 years. To support his work,subscribe to the Statesman Journal.Urness can be reached at zurness@StatesmanJournal.com or (503) 399-6801. Find him on Twitter at @ZachsORoutdoors.




12 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight: NoneDon't highlight anything 5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
Check out this wild, wild story of survival on a rock in the river (Oregon fire) (Original Post) Grasswire2 Sep 2020 OP
😯 soothsayer Sep 2020 #1
What an awful thing to go through. Amazing he survived. Good on him. nt crickets Sep 2020 #2
here's the location mentioned in the article gristy Sep 2020 #3
A location I know well MissB Sep 2020 #4
Ha! Jawbone Flats. Grasswire2 Sep 2020 #8
When I was a kid in gradeschool in Western Montana a few of the films we saw dealt with abqtommy Sep 2020 #5
I live next to a river. Grasswire2 Sep 2020 #9
Wow...thanks for posting! Karadeniz Sep 2020 #6
Read this twice through and cried both times lettucebe Sep 2020 #7
the story still gives me goose bumps. nt Grasswire2 Sep 2020 #10
Like he said, he should have evacuated when he was warned. Blue_true Sep 2020 #12
K & R FakeNoose Sep 2020 #11

gristy

(10,667 posts)
3. here's the location mentioned in the article
Thu Sep 17, 2020, 03:58 PM
Sep 2020
https://www.google.com/maps/place/OR-22+%26+N+Fork+Rd,+Oregon+97358/

Luck, in that if those trees hadn’t stopped him, he likely would have driven directly into a firestorm that absolutely torched the area near Highway 22 and North Fork Road, leveling the Oregon Department of Forestry building and North Fork Crossing late Monday night.


MissB

(15,812 posts)
4. A location I know well
Thu Sep 17, 2020, 04:15 PM
Sep 2020

I’ve been up to Opal Creek more times than I’d care to count. I’m still watching their Facebook page to see whether or not Jawbone Flats has burned up or not. That road he was on takes you there.

Amazing that he managed to survive. And have a beer.

abqtommy

(14,118 posts)
5. When I was a kid in gradeschool in Western Montana a few of the films we saw dealt with
Thu Sep 17, 2020, 04:45 PM
Sep 2020

surviving a forest fire. The #1 rule was always: find water. Get in it and you'll survive. I never had
to put that to the test but I was ready. Thanks for the great op.

Grasswire2

(13,571 posts)
9. I live next to a river.
Thu Sep 17, 2020, 10:22 PM
Sep 2020

Not the Santiam, bigger than that. I would hate to have to get in it. We did have fire Weds night on an island next to the shore and it took five fire departments, three fireboats and 800 feet of hose to get it under control in about three hours.

Hm. I will have to ask some family members if they learned as children in Montana schools how to survive forest fire.

lettucebe

(2,337 posts)
7. Read this twice through and cried both times
Thu Sep 17, 2020, 08:54 PM
Sep 2020

This story is so incredible -- I hope he gets on some of the cable shows. Said had the trees not blocked his car he would not have survived as he was heading straight into the inferno. Thanks for posting this!

Blue_true

(31,261 posts)
12. Like he said, he should have evacuated when he was warned.
Thu Sep 17, 2020, 10:42 PM
Sep 2020

He seem to have learned that being a rugged individual comes with risks.

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