Roberts visits areas, families affected by Kansas wildfires
He led most of his herd to safety, 100 head of breeding red Angus cows, by tempting them with a bale of sweet-tasting cane hay loaded on his pickup truck. He led them to a green wheat field -- and then watched in awe and fear as flames sometimes 10 feet tall surrounded him and his herd.
"Oh yeah, I was scared," he said. "There was so much smoke at times I couldn't see anything."
He was totally surrounded by the wildfire, he said. But he saved the herd and two pet pit bull dogs, Gus and Minnie.
About 3,400 of the 3,500 acres of the ranch his parents, Carol and
Ketron and his deputies had raced through the town of
"Then we went door to door," he said.
The fire was terrifying to watch, Ketron said. And now, he said, the county that last Monday was one vast grassland grazing area is a desert. The grass was turned to black ash, and winds since then have blown all that away, leaving brown-gray dust.
Ketron said he has slept only about 16 hours in the four days and nights since the fire tore through
Some ditches Roberts rode past on Friday were already filling with drifts of dust.
Roberts, a friend of the Swayzes, visited their burned-off ranch as he toured damaged areas south of
He said Vice President
"I wish they would just put him on a horse or something and get it done," Roberts said.
Bureaucracy might move slowly, Roberts said.
"All of this is going to cost a lot of money, and right now I don't think there is money in the current budget that fits the needs here," he said. "So we're going to have to figure all of that out."
Joyce and
Family photos, all their clothes, furniture, house -- gone. Their son, Monty, who lived up the street, lost his home too.
Roberts hugged
She told him: "We'll be fine. The Lord provides."
Five families in
Her husband and two of her sons are volunteer firefighters and rushed to fight the flames on Monday, she said. One of her sons called to ask her if she could try to save the family's horses.
She tried, and saved one, she said. But one other one had to be euthanized after the fire raced through town.
Roberts rolled into
Ketron said his deputies and others have a big health problem to solve -- burying thousands of cattle killed this week.
County officials estimate anywhere from 3,000 to 9,000 cattle died in
Ketron on Friday said firefighters are still battling hotspots that could restart wildfire. A number of trees in
The
No one knows exactly where the fire started or even how, but
___
(c)2017 The Wichita Eagle (Wichita, Kan.)
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