Texans plan to rebuild wildfire-devastated homes

POSSUM KINGDOM LAKE, Texas (AP) — Their homes have been reduced to a gray heap of ashes, and acres of trees turned into blackened sticks. Yet many who live in a lakeside community ravaged by a massive Texas wildfire — whether in a million-dollar mansion, a quaint lake house or a simple fishing cabin — say they hope to rebuild and get back to watching the wildlife and whiling away the hours with loved ones.

“Possum Kingdom is a state of mind,” said Carolyn Bennis, whose dream house was destroyed in the fire that has charred nearly 150 square miles in three North Texas counties. “It’s not necessarily a place. It’s just your heart and you just get addicted to it.”

Firefighters have contained about a fourth of the blaze, and U.S. Forest Service spokeswoman Janice Gakin said law enforcement officers will escort residents into parts of the area to view the devastation firsthand Friday.

The fire that erupted a week ago near the lake about 70 miles west of Fort Worth has destroyed about 160 of the community’s 3,000 homes — mostly belonging people who lived there on weekends or during the summer.

“It will be years before this is back to what it used to be,” said Palo Pinto County Sheriff Ira Mercer, standing near a blackened field where the smell of smoke was thick and wind gusts blew ashes in the air.

The blaze is one of several burning in the drought-stricken state, including two massive wildfires in West Texas. Since Jan. 1, wildfires have scorched more than 1.4 million acres in the state and led to the deaths of two firefighters.

Bennis’ three-bedroom lake house was atop a cliff overlooking Hell’s Gate Cove at Possum Kingdom Lake, formed some 70 years ago by damming the Brazos River. Just last month she and her husband sold their larger home in Cleburne and moved their belongings and family heirlooms into the lake house, dividing their time between Possum Kingdom and a small condominium in downtown Fort Worth.

She and her husband would watch deer nibble outside the kitchen window, or sit on the deck sipping coffee or wine as migrating pelicans and ducks flew overhead and children splashed in the crystal clear water below. They had a big Easter weekend planned, and her 4-year-old grandson cried when he found out about the fire because he feared he wouldn’t be able to hunt eggs. Next year, she told him. Bennis and her husband will rebuild.

“Possum Kingdom is just a big deal for us,” she said. “It’s not just our house. It’s where our heart is.”

One home in the area was destroyed except for three scorched walls left standing — and its garage untouched by the flames. A stone fireplace was the only thing that survived next door. On another cliff across the cove, a fireplace towered over the heap that remained of the burned-out home, while an upscale house next door was not damaged. Some docks and boats in the lake below showed no signs of the fire.

In some places, the blaze blackened fields down to the soil and charred trees, burning away even their branches. In others, trees and shrubs were untouched and a few wildflowers grew on the roadside.

The fire also destroyed John McPherson’s 1960s fishing cabin near Hell’s Gate Cove — which he’d finally bought in December after leasing for about four years, he said. McPherson, who lives in Abilene, said it had the same great views as nearby mansions “without the million dollar price tag.” Because he had no insurance, all he has left is eight-tenths of an acre, a dock and the scorched and warped metal roof he put on just last summer.

The mid-week cooler temperatures and high humidity that helped North Texas firefighters were expected to remain through the weekend. But forecasters said the hot, windy conditions dreaded by fire officials were expected to return Monday.

Gov. Rick Perry has proclaimed the three-day period spanning Easter weekend as Days of Prayer for Rain in the state.

Meanwhile, two massive West Texas fires were 75 percent contained — a 160,000-acre blaze in Coke County near San Angelo and a 200,000-acre fire burning for two weeks in Jeff Davis County.

Bridget Litten, a spokeswoman with the federal firefighting management team called in to help with those blazes, said a storm system that brought relief with cooler temperatures also caused problems when lightning started a few small fires. But crews were prepared, she said.

SportsPlus

Mower County

New mural representative of Mower County’s welcoming nature

Crime, Courts & Emergencies

Austin teen injured in car-bike collision

News

Report: Minnesota youth have huge potential to shape the 2024 presidential election

Agriculture

MnDOT asks motorists, farm equipment operators to safely share the road during fall harvest season

Mower County

Candidates for city office touch on important issues in Austin through forum

Mower County

District 23B candidates focus on healthcare, challenges facing state

Mower County

One of a Kind: Tanner and Caitlyn Conway have grown a new variation of Dahlia

Crime, Courts & Emergencies

Darin Finley gets 58 months for the hit-and-run death of Melissa Rack

Mower County

8K race at the Nature Center Saturday

Mower County

Former car club comes together for reunion

Adams

Adams Community Development Initiative hosts Childcare Community Roundtable

Mower County

In Your Community: Several take part in pickleball event

Mower County

Lunchbox presents past Austin floods

News

Speaker Johnson sets House vote on government funding bill after a one-week postponement

News

Will the Federal Reserve cut interest rates fast enough to deliver a ‘soft landing’?

News

Florida will launch criminal probe into apparent assassination attempt of Trump, governor says

Mower County

Minnesota’s regular waterfowl season opens this weekend

News

The summer of massive road construction season continues into the fall

Mower County

Sketches of community: Program uses laughter to bridge differences

Hayfield

One injured in two-car wreck near Hayfield

News

Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs is arrested, and the indictment is expected to be unsealed

News

Congress is gridlocked. These members are convinced AI legislation could break through

Mower County

Council votes 4-3 for levy increase of 11.97%, down from 13%

Mower County

VFW closes weekend of 100th anniversary celebration with time capsule