TEXT_SIZE
Please update your Flash Player to view content.

Supervisor, wife escape house fire

If it wasn’t for their smoke alarm, District 1 County Supervisor Bob Pyle and his wife Vicki might not be alive today. The couple escaped out of the front, top floor window of their home, when smoke from a fire set the detector off. An electrical short in the dishwasher set the machine on fire.

Bob Pyle was taken to Banner Lassen Medical Center for smoke inhalation, but was released the same night and no one else suffered any injuries.

“I was fast asleep, when I heard the alarm, and it didn’t even register to me what I was hearing,” Pyle said. “If it hadn’t been for that alarm going off, I don’t know if I would have ever woken up.”

The Pyles awoke to the smoke alarm late in the evening. The entire top floor of their more than 100-year-old home was filled with smoke. Pyle said they quickly realized that the smoke was coming from the first floor of the house. They tried to take a couple steps down the stairway of their home, only to be pushed back by the extreme heat generated from the fire.

Vicki Pyle later explained that the heat generated by just that small area of their kitchen was strong enough to melt candles, silk plants, blinds and even the smoke alarm that woke them up.

Cut off from the downstairs and with more smoke billowing into the top floor, the Pyles came to the conclusion that their only way out was through the top floor window.

As soon as they were outside of the top floor window standing on the roof, Vicki called the fire department. It was just after 10 p.m., and the Pyles started calling out for help from anyone nearby.

Next-door neighbor Tammy McConnell heard the Pyles shouting from the small sliver of slanted roof in front of the bedroom window — also noting the urgency in Vicki’s voice. McConnell navigated the Pyles’ large, pitch-black garage next door to the their home, her eventual goal the ladder on the far wall.

“The only way I can describe it is that I had a guardian angel watching out for me,” McConnell said of her ability to hoist a ladder twice her size off the garage wall.

Pyle said McConnell was able to lift the ladder above her head and run it over to him and his wife, and with a little coaching from him, she was able to extend the ladder and get them down to the ground. Bob said he could immediately see the flames coming from the dishwasher in the kitchen. He then grabbed a bucket, filled it with water and started dumping it on the dishwasher.

“I came into the kitchen and started throwing buckets of water on the fire,” Pyle said. “That’s when I got into the smoke. That was able to help a little before the fire department showed up.”

Firefighters from Susanville, Susan River and the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection showed up minutes after Pyle started tackling the dishwasher, at around 10:30 p.m. Firefighters from Janesville were also dispatched, but were stopped before getting there. Members of the Lassen County Sheriff’s Office were the first to arrive at the scene.

Susan River Fire Chief Glenn Hodgson said while the house did sustain significant smoke damage, the structural damage was very minimal. Pyle, who said he has lived in the house for more than 34 years, said they had recently redone the exterior of the house. If there is a silver lining surrounding the fire, its that they are now going to be able to redo much of the interior. Pyle said his insurance should be more than sufficient to cover the cost of the damages.

After the fire was extinguished, Pyle said emergency services offered to put the couple into a hotel for the night.

“I told them that was OK,” Pyle said. We just opened up all the windows in the house, wrapped extra warm, and we were out bailing hay at 4 a.m.”

Pyle said if there was anything that people could take out of this experience, it was to always check your smoke alarms.

“It’s funny how a little battery can be so important,” Pyle said.

Add comment

The Lassen County Times encourages civil discussion on news stories that are important to our community. We do ask that commenters follow certain rules of conduct. Keep your comments on the topic at hand. Threats, insults, lies, and inappropriate language are prohibited. Just as with our letters to the editor we want you to be accountable for your comments so we ask that you use your full real name. Anonymous comments are not allowed.
The Lassen County Times reserves the right to delete any comments that do not comply with these rules of conduct. Commenters who repeatedly do not comply will be prohibited from posting further comments.
Comments are limited to 300 characters. If you would like to post a longer message, please submit a letter to the editor.


Move
-

Sports Headlines

Top Headline

Renegades split with walk off win

Renegades split with walk off win

Hunter Morris slides into second during the Susanville Renegades’ doubleheader against the Galena Silver Sox Saturday, June 8. The Renegades split with Galena, losing the first game, but winning the second.  Photo by Maddie Musante June 17 — The Susanville Renegades baseball...

Read More...

Major Division Red Sox win Tournament of Champions

Major Division Red Sox win Tournament of Champions

The Major Division Red Sox defeated the Yankees Saturday, June 8 to win the Susanville Little League Tournament of Champions. The tournament is Susanville Little League’s end of the season tournament. The championship team and its coaches pose together with their trophies. The team is...

Read More...

Races at Diamond Mountain Speedway are in full swing

Races at Diamond Mountain Speedway are in full swing

Nathan Horward, driving car No. 81, and Richard Longacre, in car No. 07, make their way around a turn.  Photo by Maddie Musante June 13 — Lassen County racing fans were out in full force to hear engines roar and watch dirt fly at Diamond Mountain Speedway’s second racing event...

Read More...
Facebook Image

National News

Yellow Page Directory
ConnectionBtn
Advertise with us
Local Events
Weather
Visitor's Guide
LVGCover
Contact Us
"); pageTracker._trackPageview(); } catch(err) {}