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Saving a Napa Valley Ranch from a Deadly Wildfire

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One the evening of October 8th, as deadly wildfires were breaking out in wine country, Derek Webb was finishing dinner on the back porch of his property, the Triple S Ranch in the Napa Valley.

His neighbor, a volunteer fireman, rushed to his property to alert him to the smell of smoke wafting from the hills nearby.

"We knew my property wasn't on fire...so then we all raced down the road looking for the fire," Webb said.

"We're coming back up the road and then all of a sudden we looking up the hill, and just saw a massive fireball coming up over the mountain."

Webb, his neighbors and employees spent the next 10 hours, working throughout the night, to put out the flames from the Tubbs wildfire descending on the 12-acre private resort and wedding venue in Calistoga which dates to the 1800s and was once a dairy farm and a restaurant.

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One of the toughest challenges Webb and his crew faced while battling the blaze was gusty, fast-moving winds which allowed the wildfires that tore through northern California to spread so quickly, killing dozens and burning more than 220,000 acres.

"(The wind) would come one direction at 60 miles an hour and then turn around and come the other direction at 60 miles an hour," Webb said. 

Webb had begun clearing dry brush surrounding his ranch years earlier which he referred to as his "first line of defense." On Sunday night, as firestorms broke out all around his property, tractors and skid steers were used to dig a perimeter around the ranch to try to keep the approaching flames at bay.

"Then we went into full fire suppression mode," he said. "We used tractors, we used backhoes, we used shovels, we used picks, we used wet blankets, everything you can think of."

If their efforts to save Triple S Ranch failed, Webb said he and his crew were prepared to jump into the pool which isn't surrounded by any structures that could go up in flames. Luckily for them, it never came to that.

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