skip to main content

How one man defied evacuation orders to save his home

As wildfires burned out of control around Los Angeles, one man has described how he defied evacuation orders and stayed to successfully protect his home.

The Pacific Palisades house that 65-year-old John Carr lives in was passed down to him by his parents.

It is now one of just a handful of properties that is still standing, after the Palisades wildfire ripped through the neighbourhood this week, leaving the community virtually unrecognisable.

"The house was built by my mother and father in 1960 and I lived here my whole life so there's a lot of memories here and I think I owed it to them as well to try my best to save it," he said.

Mr Carr said he has never witnessed anything like the blaze that ravaged his neighbourhood on Tuesday.

Armed with his organisational skills, his history of being a pilot and past fire experiences, he decided to ignore evacuation, hunker down and doused his home in an attempt to save the lasting memories of his parents.

"Some things in life are worth fighting for, you know. If I were to lose this house, it would be very difficult to afford to build a new house, to pay the enormous property taxes they have here. What would I do?" he said.

Remnants of homes and businesses reduced to ashes during the aftermath of the Palisades Fire

As the fire began to encroach on his backyard Mr Carr said he sprang into action, jumping fences to tackle spot fires from all directions using his hose, not only on the flames but also himself.

"I was awake all night, all day. I got a little bit of sleep after things calmed down a little bit, after all the houses all burned down. I did probably hurt a rib jumping a fence."

He said he wished the Los Angeles Fire Department put in the same effort as he did.

"When I was out here, hosing the house down and getting ready and when the houses started to burn, I didn't see one single fire truck out here at all. Zero.

"If they had had some fire trucks and just put a squirt here, a squirt there and kept an eye on things, all these houses would be here now. I'm telling you right now. I saw it with my own eyeballs. All these houses.

"The houses behind me they're all gone. They started with one little spark, one little small fire. They just squirted those out, had a few people out there, they'd all be here now."

On the destruction caused by the wildfires, he said: "Well it's devastating. I've lived here my whole life. I know these people that lives in all these houses, I know the houses.

"This is my memories and they're gone. But, you know, unfortunately this is California and California is a desert and you get fires like this. This is natural."

After saving his house, does he think he was brave or reckless?

"Well, you know, I'll leave that to other people to decide. I did what I needed to do, I did what I wanted to do, I did what I thought I could do and that's what I did," he said.

To his neighbours, Mr Carr is a hero.

"Oh, actually they've been very gracious. The neighbour over here thanked me for saving his house and the neighbour over here thanked me. So, you know, thanks is plenty."