• niktemadur@lemmy.world
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    9 months ago

    Since you put it that way, I can proudly recall that day I woke up with the backyard on fire during a Santa Ana wind event. It wasn’t really a backyard, I lived in a cabin and it was a canyon full of dry shrubs, so imagine the amount of smoke and ashes being blasted my way. Some flames managed to lap at the walls and leave black scars.

    My cat - which I thought was a he but turned out to be a she - had given birth a few months before, so there were a total of six cats at the time.

    I got up like a bolt out of bed, and what did I do next? I ran for the cats, get them to safety. No wallet, no trying to move the car to safety, not even putting on pants, I ran out in boxer shorts with scared wailing cats in my arms, then ran back to get the rest of them.

    Then suddenly things took an incredible turn:
    The colony’s pvc water pipe behind the cabin cracked and burst from the heat outside and cold water within, a wall of water went up like a fountain, then the wind shoved it straight towards the cabin. Here it was in the middle of a fire, and it was like a waterfall on all four sides.

    We all survived. Even the cabin itself.

    • My cat - which I thought was a he but turned out to be a she - had given birth a few months before, so there were a total of six cats at the time.

      Similar thing happened with my cockatiel Henry. Spent 15yrs thinking he was a boy until we created a little nest box for him and he laid an egg. From then on she was Henrieta. :)

      Glad your cabin survived!

      • Nikls94@lemmy.world
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        9 months ago

        That’s almost what happened to Herbert the pigeons who one day laid an egg. But she kept the name.