California woman rescues horses, yaks and
cows from deadly wildfires
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[October 13, 2017]
By Sharon Bernstein
(Reuters) - The acrid smell of smoke borne
on hurricane-strength winds greeted horse trainer Rebecca Cushman before
dawn, her phone ringing repeatedly as people frantically sought help
saving their animals from California's deadly wildfires.
It was still dark on Monday morning when Cushman, 41, set out from her
farm west of the conflagration, towing a four-horse trailer behind her
white Dodge pickup truck.
She worked all day and into the night, loading four horses at a time
from fire-ravaged farms and ranches in Sonoma and Napa counties, taking
the animals back to her farm in West Petaluma before going out for more.
By Thursday, she had helped rescue 48 horses, several cows and even some
yaks in the bucolic vineyard and farm country north of San Francisco hit
by the state's deadliest wildfires in nearly a century.
"We have dogs, goats, guinea fowl, chickens, ducks, donkeys, miniature
horses and horses at our farm right now," Cushman said on Thursday. "I
just finished helping load yaks and cows."
Firefighters began to gain ground on Thursday against blazes that have
killed at least 31 people in Northern California and left hundreds
missing amid mass evacuations in the heart of the state's wine country.
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Animals are difficult to rescue in disasters like California's
fast-moving wildfires, as their owners must often choose between staying
behind to care for them or fleeing to protect their own lives and those
of their family members.
Some animals, including many rescued by Cushman, found refuge at
privately owned farms outside the fire zone. Others were sheltered at
the Sonoma County Fairgrounds in Santa Rosa.
The first calls there for help came in at about 12:30 a.m. on Monday, as
winds of up to 75 miles per hour (121 km per hour) whipped fires
throughout the state into dangerous conflagrations, said fairgrounds
spokeswoman Leasha LaBruzzi.
By Thursday, the fairgrounds housed more than 300 horses, LaBruzzi said.
It had also become a temporary home to 200 people who fled the fires
with their pets.
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A horse is seen along Highway 12 during the Nuns Fire in Sonoma,
California, U.S., October 10, 2017. REUTERS/Stephen Lam/File Photo
POLICE ESCORT
Santa Rosa resident Christy Gentry, 43, who was staying at the
fairgrounds, spent Monday morning helping round up and rescue horses
at Mark West Stables, where she works, near her home.
She and her husband, Jeff, have no cellular service at their home,
and their landline was knocked out by high winds on Sunday night, so
they were fast asleep when the fires began.
They were awakened at midnight by the stable's assistant trainer
pounding on their bedroom window.
They ran to help evacuate the 26 horses that board at the stable.
Christy Gentry's job was to race out to the pastures, the sky black
except for flames licking over the top of the mountain, bearing
carrots to persuade anxious horses to come to the barn.
One, a dun-colored draft horse named Duncan, never liked getting
into horse trailers, and he was particularly resistant that night.
As trainers and horse-haulers moved the animals, volunteers brought
feed and hay. Cushman asked for contributions to her account at a
local feed store, and quickly raised $8,000.
Exhausted, with a headache from the smoke, Cushman said on Thursday
the size and unpredictability of the fires made rescues more chaotic
than in past blazes.
She rushed to get to one property only to find the roads blocked.
"We were later able to get a police escort to get those three horses
out," she said.
(Reporting by Sharon Bernstein in Sacramento, California; Editing by
Peter Cooney and Lisa Shumaker)
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