A lot of people this week have been asking me why the wildfires in LA are happening and why no one can put them out. The devastation is unlike anything I’ve seen before, and the timing is terrifying.
I’ve lived in LA my entire life, and fire season is as natural to us as palm trees and traffic on the 405. Growing up, I accepted certain realities: evacuating during late summer, keeping “go bags” packed by the door, and watching the news with dread as flames crept closer to my neighborhood. I learned early that nature doesn’t care about your plans or possessions.
In 2018, I watched my entire world burn during the Woolsey Fire. My 70 year old dad illegally crossed the fire line to save our house while we evacuated - a decision that saved our home but one I’ll never forget. He walked 16 miles to get to our house only to discover that we didn’t have any water and the flames were engulfing everything around him. He shoveled dirt on fires near the house for 8 hours straight. I’ll never shake the memory of returning to my neighborhood, seeing nothing but ashes where my neighbors’ homes once stood.
And now, just days ago, my brother, who can’t even walk due to his ongoing disability, lost everything he owned to these January fires. The video you’re watching is what’s left of his house. When he was evacuating, the police told him that he had two choices: run for his life or die. That wasn’t an option for him, but by some miracle, he escaped with his car and is safe. He watched hundreds of people abandon their cars and run to the beach for safety.
I’ll be posting a Geyser fund link in the coming days to help him find temporary housing - or you can help support him by simply zapping this post. All of the proceeds will go to my brother.
People joke that we don’t have seasons in SoCal, but locals know better. We have two seasons: fire season and the anxious months waiting for the next fire season.
We often forget the raw power of nature until moments like these remind us how small we really are against its force.
Here’s what you need to know about LA’s fire crisis, why these January fires are unprecedented, and why firefighters are calling this a “fire hurricane.”
How do wildfires actually start?
🔥 Something creates a spark (97% of LA fires are human-caused)
🌿 Dry vegetation provides endless fuel
💨 Winds feed oxygen to the flames
What’s normal?
📆 Fire season traditionally runs late June through October
🌲 Fires typically start in remote areas like the Santa Monica Mountains and Malibu, where thousands of acres of dry brush wait like kindling
💨 Santa Ana winds sweep through coastal SoCal during fall, typically 40-60mph with gusts up to 70mph, occurring 10-25 times annually
What makes these winds so dangerous?
💧They create desert-like conditions with humidity dropping below 10%
🌡️ As they descend from mountains, they heat up dramatically
🌊 These winds can make coastal areas hotter than the desert, with fall sometimes bringing our highest temperatures of the year
Why are these fires different?
🌪️ We’re experiencing a “fire hurricane” with unprecedented 100mph winds
❄️ These fires are raging in January - traditionally our wettest, safest month
🏙️ Unlike normal patterns, multiple fires ignited in urban areas simultaneously
🌧️ Historic drought: 0.03 inches of rain since October (we should have had 3.5 inches)
The devastating impact
🏠 10,000+ structures destroyed and counting
☠️ 11 people dead and counting
💰 Potentially the costliest natural disaster in U.S. history ($52-57 billion)
👥 180,000 people forced to evacuate their homes
⚠️ Major fires still burning with zero containment
But here’s what makes these fires truly terrifying: they create their own weather system. The intense heat creates powerful updrafts, surrounding air rushes in like a vacuum, and the cycle feeds itself - creating what scientists call a “firestorm.” It’s like a hurricane made of fire, and it’s virtually impossible to stop once it begins.
We’re watching climate change transform our home in real-time. What used to be a predictable season of natural disaster has become a year-round threat. The scariest part? This may be our new normal.
Stay safe, LA 💖
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Replies (28)
I'm truly sorry to hear about the devastating impact of the wildfires in LA, #[0] The stories you shared are both heart-wrenching and a testament to the incredible resilience and courage shown by individuals facing such challenges. It's heartbreaking to see lives and homes affected by these natural disasters, highlighting the urgent need for support, awareness, and action.
Our thoughts go out to everyone affected by these fires, including your family members who have endured such losses. The bravery of your dad risking his safety to protect your home and your brother's strength in facing adversity are truly remarkable.
It's essential to raise awareness about climate change and its role in exacerbating these catastrophic events. We must come together as a community to support those in need during times of crisis like this.
If there's anything more we can do or if you'd like me to help spread information about supporting relief efforts for those impacted by the wildfires, please let me know. Your message serves as a powerful reminder of the importance of solidarity and compassion during difficult times.
Oh Jesus! I’ll be praying for you and your family especially your brother. This is all so devastating.
Thank you 🙏
Born and raised in LA as well, i hear you about climate change, i think there are arguments to be made WRT weather volatility
But what about the lack of vegetation management? Inadequate VM is a trend all across west coast and mountain west-i see it all the time thru work. I think that’s a really important, not adequately discussed issue
Definitely a big issue too! There’s multiple problems we’re facing for sure.
The “climate change” you are blaming this on is the “climate” of electing retarded government officials who sabotage your water supply and city management.
It is the new normal for people who believe they can control the weather of earth with CO2 but not prevent wildfires.
If you zap this you’re fucking retarded.
Australian here. I see you and I hear you 🫂💜
Firestorms are next level hell and almost impossible to extinguish if the winds don’t change.
I hope a lot of really bad shit happens to you.
Naw. You’re just a dumb fuck who believes the dumbest fucks. Enjoy life because I hear ignorance is bliss.
SOCAL is high desert. All that vegetation the republicans want to remove can go dormant for extremely long periods of time without water. You can’t just go ripping out literally all of the vegetation in a high desert. Unless you’ve been there and seen it for yourself you won’t understand.
Best wishes to your brother and the whole family during this time of catastrophic loss. The damage this fire has caused is incredible, and I can't imagine what your brother is going through. Our zaps and donations won't fix everything, but hopefully it will help, and restore his faith in humanity just a little bit as he figures out his next steps. 🥰
Here in Brazil every year we have fire in arid areas, every year, but last year, by the end of winter, the fires make a record. I was thinking why everybody are so worried about that in LA if it is natural. Thanks to confirm thats is recurrent thing.
Oh, did you zap it? Listen, retarded people do amazing things all the time. There’s no telling what you’re capable of. Don’t listen to the haters.
It would be cool if you linked the post that's zapped, it's more valuable that GIFs and would make post more repostable.
In this case
View quoted note →
✅💯
Thank you SO MUCH. Literally every sat counts. You have no idea how much this means to him, he hasn’t had a glimmer of hope since he found out. We’re showing him that there is still good in the world 🙏
Most people don’t really understand unless they’ve experienced 50mph ++ winds. A lot of people are trying to blame this person or that corporation for these fires, and yes there is a ton of corruption and mismanagement… but what they don’t understand is that even if you made the BEST decisions to prevent and fight these fires, they will still keep happening and they will still keep getting worse. Nature is incredibly powerful.
🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏
Easy answer. Democrats.
After the 2019/20 fire event in Australia we saw the same reaction: People blaming governments (state, federal and local); people blaming greenies; people blaming burn offs &/or a lack of fire prevention activities; people blaming fire departments and resources; and even people blaming the trees themselves (combustible types).
People were desperate to blame someone or something.
The weather didn’t give a damn. The fires raged for months. No rain through winter mixed with seriously strong dry winds led to a catastrophic situation and it only ended when Mother Nature decided it would (with the wind dropping enough to enable firefighters to control it or with rain).
My thoughts are with you at this time and I hope that the weather turns in your favour. 🫂
Exactly. This.
I agree the idea that republican leadership could have stopped this don’t understand the power of nature. Why hasn’t republican leadership in Florida stop hurricanes?
Wow! Chilling scenery😢. Thank you for the life lesson. You are a tough soul. 🙏✝️🕊️
🙏
Respectfully, i don’t believe that anyone knows how to deal with this once it happens.
Stay strong out there. My heart goes out to all of California.
Thank you 🙏