British woman saves horses from LA wildfires
- Published
A British horse trainer living in the United States has told of the efforts undertaken to rescue hundreds of horses from wildfires engulfing Los Angeles.
Thea Creasy, originally from Southwold, in Suffolk, has worked with horses for the past 30 years.
She moved to LA two decades ago and found herself caught up in the recent wildfires that have so far left 27 people dead and have destroyed more than 10,000 homes and properties.
Ms Creasy feared many of the rescued horses were now left without homes and faced long waits in evacuation centres.
Last Wednesday, Ms Creasy worked to rescue a friend's horses near the Palisades area that had been blocked off for safety reasons.
While they had requested for permission from officials, they were denied access which Ms Creasy said was "very distressing".
They took matters into their own hands finding other routes around the area and, despite being first mistaken for looters, they got to the horses and got them out as they watched smoke rise above a nearby hillside, Ms Creasy said.
They reached an evacuation centre in the Valley area, but it did not have space for the horses, as first reported by The Telegraph., external
As they discussed where to go next, Ms Creasy said her "phone started going crazy".
"I got all these texts and calls and another fire had started, this was the Kenneth fire which was affecting Calabasas," she said.
"This was directly next to a street that I work on as a horse trainer that had several of my clients on."
Ms Creasy believed there were about 100 horses that needed to be rescued here and she used social media to request help from others with trailers.
"The horse community in California is unbelievable, people just show up, everyone steps up," she continued.
"It's not just me doing this, I didn't single handedly do this. It's an incredible community of people."
"As we got on to the freeway we could just see this massive cloud of black smoke and that's when I really started to panic," she continued.
"We had to get there as quickly as we could, sometimes these fires move so incredibly fast with these wind speeds.
"You really don't have that much time."
Ms Creasy said when they got to the street she found horse owners who "looked completely panicked" and were unsure if their horses had been saved.
However, they had no issues with any of the horses and none "caused a fuss" meaning they were able to evacuate them all.
Ms Creasy said there were now hundreds of horses and thousands of other animals without homes.
She added she would be volunteering at some of the centres to help support these animals.
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