The China Mail - Scramble to shelter animals from Los Angeles wildfires

USD -
AED 3.67298
AFN 69.911879
ALL 88.480839
AMD 387.867986
ANG 1.790204
AOA 916.502891
ARS 1130.479705
AUD 1.560645
AWG 1.8025
AZN 1.699692
BAM 1.760475
BBD 2.01821
BDT 121.44561
BGN 1.76115
BHD 0.376908
BIF 2973.954606
BMD 1
BND 1.304667
BOB 6.906795
BRL 5.669757
BSD 0.999608
BTN 85.262414
BWP 13.645733
BYN 3.271208
BYR 19600
BZD 2.00784
CAD 1.39947
CDF 2870.00025
CHF 0.84212
CLF 0.02462
CLP 944.770206
CNY 7.2033
CNH 7.199895
COP 4225.76
CRC 507.95051
CUC 1
CUP 26.5
CVE 99.254232
CZK 22.454021
DJF 177.997606
DKK 6.71438
DOP 58.725308
DZD 133.799008
EGP 50.460157
ERN 15
ETB 132.91142
EUR 0.90011
FJD 2.27435
FKP 0.758117
GBP 0.75659
GEL 2.744979
GGP 0.758117
GHS 12.97501
GIP 0.758117
GMD 72.185616
GNF 8644.084937
GTQ 7.676855
GYD 208.831209
HKD 7.795191
HNL 25.850215
HRK 6.783602
HTG 130.551477
HUF 364.460852
IDR 16652.234449
ILS 3.576775
IMP 0.758117
INR 85.311651
IQD 1308.750205
IRR 42250.000055
ISK 132.089855
JEP 0.758117
JMD 158.647385
JOD 0.709296
JPY 148.132032
KES 129.273661
KGS 87.449869
KHR 4005.603722
KMF 432.742967
KPW 899.995499
KRW 1424.178899
KWD 0.307561
KYD 0.831723
KZT 510.584696
LAK 21579.899499
LBP 89417.197299
LKR 298.308077
LRD 199.620755
LSL 18.294547
LTL 2.95274
LVL 0.60489
LYD 5.469605
MAD 9.335974
MDL 17.233399
MGA 4478.082969
MKD 55.383519
MMK 2099.484484
MNT 3573.897983
MOP 8.011224
MRU 39.603061
MUR 46.200002
MVR 15.4386
MWK 1730.811193
MXN 19.57697
MYR 4.338498
MZN 63.830001
NAD 18.295948
NGN 1601.759833
NIO 36.742251
NOK 10.41485
NPR 135.656652
NZD 1.697145
OMR 0.384977
PAB 1
PEN 3.646011
PGK 4.106745
PHP 55.812007
PKR 280.971339
PLN 3.826801
PYG 7974.852027
QAR 3.641932
RON 4.595098
RSD 105.588895
RUB 80.500757
RWF 1428.782309
SAR 3.750748
SBD 8.350849
SCR 14.211704
SDG 600.469215
SEK 9.741895
SGD 1.305194
SHP 0.785843
SLE 22.75048
SLL 20969.48728
SOS 570.419531
SRD 36.199503
STD 20697.981008
SVC 8.733172
SYP 13003.313899
SZL 18.292705
THB 33.258002
TJS 10.400007
TMT 3.5
TND 3.037043
TOP 2.40776
TRY 38.77753
TTD 6.77531
TWD 30.47175
TZS 2696.000211
UAH 41.462524
UGX 3652.679524
UYU 41.777225
UZS 12885.066485
VES 92.714987
VND 25957
VUV 119.97318
WST 2.778545
XAF 590.662242
XAG 0.030501
XAU 0.000308
XCD 2.700001
XDR 0.720178
XOF 590.662242
XPF 107.453315
YER 244.710951
ZAR 18.38368
ZMK 9001.202465
ZMW 26.279733
ZWL 321.999592
  • RBGPF

    2.2700

    65.27

    +3.48%

  • CMSC

    0.0200

    22.08

    +0.09%

  • RIO

    1.4300

    61.41

    +2.33%

  • NGG

    -3.1600

    67.53

    -4.68%

  • CMSD

    -0.0400

    22.3

    -0.18%

  • RELX

    -2.0200

    51.83

    -3.9%

  • GSK

    0.7500

    37.37

    +2.01%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1200

    10.38

    -1.16%

  • BTI

    -0.6600

    40.98

    -1.61%

  • SCS

    0.3600

    10.82

    +3.33%

  • VOD

    -0.2300

    9.07

    -2.54%

  • AZN

    1.3800

    68.95

    +2%

  • BCE

    -0.1500

    22.56

    -0.66%

  • BP

    0.4200

    30.19

    +1.39%

  • BCC

    4.4800

    93.1

    +4.81%

  • JRI

    0.0300

    13.01

    +0.23%

Scramble to shelter animals from Los Angeles wildfires
Scramble to shelter animals from Los Angeles wildfires / Photo: © AFP

Scramble to shelter animals from Los Angeles wildfires

When wildfires roared to life around Los Angeles, Janell Gruss had to leave immediately. But as the manager of a stable with 25 horses and other animals, she knew it was going to be complicated.

Text size:

While some people just got in their cars and drove out of the danger zone, Gruss had to wrangle more than two dozen frightened horses, as embers swirled in 100-mile (160-kilometer) -an-hour winds.

"The last horse we had to get out of the barn... it was pretty bad," Gruss told AFP at the Los Angeles Equestrian Center, where hundreds of animals have been brought this week.

"It was very smoky. It was dark. I couldn't see where I was," she recalled. "Both the horse and I were tripping over things, branches, whatever was on the ground."

Gruss said coralling the animals was so challenging, she feared at one point she might not make it out alive.

"I thought I might have been one of those casualties," she said, as tears rolled down her face.

"You hear about the person that goes in to get the last horse and doesn't come out."

More than 150,000 people have been forced from their homes by the huge blazes tearing through the city in a tragedy that has killed at least 16 people and changed the face of Los Angeles forever.

With so many people ordered to get out of the way of the advancing wildfires and needing to take their animals with them, capacity is strained.

"We've never seen anything like this," said Jennie Nevin, director of communications for the Los Angeles Equestrian Center.

"The first night was very busy and chaotic. Lots of people coming from all over."

- 'A whirlwind' -

Dozens of people milled around the barns Saturday at the equestrian center, where donkeys, pigs and ponies have also found shelter.

Tarah Paige, a professional stuntwoman, had brought her three-year-old daughter to visit their pony Truffles and her miniature cow Cuddles -- a TV star in her own right who has appeared on several programs.

"It's been a whirlwind," said Paige, for whom the equestrian center has been an oasis in the midst of an unimaginable catastrophe.

Nevin says there has been an outpouring of support and people offering their services to help care for the menagerie.

"It really takes a village," she said. "It takes the community."

Across the Los Angeles sprawl there are activists, veterinarians and volunteers working to rescue and care for animals made homeless in the tragedy, including some that were injured.

The Pasadena Humane Society received about 400 animals from Altadena, where the flames have already consumed more than 14,000 acres (5,600 hectares).

One of their patients is a five-day-old puppy that was found in the ruins of a building, its ears burned.

Annie Harvilicz, founder of the Animal Wellness Center, says she has hardly slept a wink all week.

As the fire spread through the upmarket Pacific Palisades, Harvilicz posted on Facebook that she was happy to take in animals.

The post "exploded," she said, and dogs, cats and even a rabbit began arriving.

With flames still raging out of control, the calls for help have not stopped.

But, she thinks, even when the firefighters have quelled the blaze, the slow-motion tragedy will roll on.

"There's gonna be more pets found, more pets injured, with smoke inhalation and burns that we're gonna start to discover as some of the fire recedes," she said.

"This is just the beginning."

C.Smith--ThChM