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00:00said it before you heard the emotion in his voice. I can tell you just sitting
00:03here talking with him as we fly around. It's very real because I mean he's
00:06seeing a lot of places of people that that he knows and he's been going
00:10nonstop since early yesterday. So he hasn't had any sleep. So I mean we
00:14really commit him for all of his efforts and all the efforts of the guys
00:18on the ground. But as we're flying around just east of Guthrie, we're
00:21seeing a lot of what you're seeing right here. Just a lot of devastation,
00:24a lot of homes, a lot of structures that are completely destroyed. We made
00:27our way up to Stillwater. We were the first ones first helicopter over
00:31Stillwater this morning and getting those images. It's just a lot of
00:35devastation up there, at least on Francisco and I were estimating about
00:39100 homes that we saw up in the Stillwater area. But we're seeing a
00:42lot of that. And the chief just said about 50 homes here just to the east
00:46of the Guthrie area. This is east of Guthrie and south of Langston. So
00:51we're just right here, right? Almost in the dead center of Logan County.
00:55Come on.
00:58Yes,
01:00but what we know right now is, um, there's about 170,000 acres that were
01:05were burned and forestry is up flying right now to kind of get the exact
01:09number. Um, we have last night I had a report of about 293 homes slash
01:15structures that were destroyed. And so we're still trying to track down how
01:19do these fires start? We think there were some controlled burns that was
01:22happening a few days before and some things got out of control. We think
01:27some of the power lines contributed to this. Um, also some some controlled
01:32burns underneath right away is underneath those lines. We need to look
01:35at that as a state as well. A lot of families that are displaced right now,
01:39and we're still flying around with Chief Young, and he's doing a survey of
01:43the whole area, and he's able to communicate with his guys on the ground
01:46and send them to those areas where they need to put out those hot spots. So
01:50this is, you know, an invaluable asset that he's able to use to be able to
01:54see it from up here and see where he needs to send his guys. But we're
01:57seeing a lot of damage. And, you know, there's a lot of people out here that
02:01know all of these neighbors that know, you know, the people that have lost so
02:05much in this area, not just in this area, but, you know, all over the state
02:09where these fires affected families and friends and neighbors. And I mean, the
02:14Oklahoma standard is going to be put in full effect.
02:24Yeah,
02:26400 to command.
02:32Yeah, I'll be on the east side correction, the west side of it. At
02:37this time, I do see a little bit of flames off of each one, especially the
02:40southern most plumes going up. Be about a quarter of miles to the south
02:48of midwest and camp quarter mile south of midwest and camp crews will be able
02:56to enter in off of residents off of camp or correction off of midwest again,
03:01about a quarter mile south of camp.
03:06That's the closest structure that's threatened right there. Yeah, the good
03:12thing is it's not a bunch of cedars right there. It's a bunch of scrub
03:15Yeah, it looks like those have all burned out before. Yeah.