Proj Aug: Wall of Fire Hits Big (Literally)

On June 20, the 4th report from Project August was finalized and published. This is important because our lunar month timing observation gets even stronger with unfolding news right at the one-month point.

It was Headline #72 that said, “Wall of fire takes out neighborhood (stone walls might be surrounding this community).” That was June 20th.

On July 19th (right at 1 month from prediction time), this news shows up from AP:

Washington wildfires destroy about 100 homes

PATEROS, Wash. – Residents strolled through the smoldering rubble of their neighborhoods, some wearing surgical masks to protect their lungs from the smoke and ash lingering in the air of the riverside community they call “Paterodise.”

“Paterodise is hurting right now,” said one, Stephanie Brown, as she surveyed what was left of a friend’s home.

A wind-driven, lightning-caused wildfire racing through rural north-central Washington destroyed about 100 homes Thursday and Friday, leaving behind solitary brick chimneys and burned-out automobiles as it blackened hundreds of square miles in the scenic Methow Valley northeast of Seattle.

“in Pateros, a wall of fire wiped out a block of homes on Dawson Street. David Brownlee, 75, said he drove away Thursday evening just as the fire reached the front of his home, which erupted like a box of matches.”

 

That already sounds like a big enough hit, because it was almost verbatim from the predicted headline. But in order to grasp the full significance here, one must see the pictures of this community, because this particular neighborhood had a stone wall beside the street (note: picture is at the link below and the wall does not appear to be the typical permanent stone wall).

Washington Wildfires Latest: Carlton Complex Fire Ravages Homes in Pateros,

Published: Jul 19, 2014, 7:58 PM EDT

Wildfires fueled by dry, windy conditions are raging across Washington, burning up more than 100 homes and forcing the evacuations of more than 1,000 residents across the state. On Saturday, the blaze was growing rapidly and burning in new directions.

After evacuation orders were lifted in Pateros, residents began streaming back into the scorched town to discover the charred remains of their livelihoods.

 

Notes / Conclusion

To the critical eye, that brick-looking wall in the screenshot appears to be more of a fire-containment wall, probably fabricated by emergency responders. Perhaps this is what the dreamers saw in the dreams. Regardless, I can’t imagine anything more precise for this particular headline, which means this score (4.6) will probably be the final score for this PA headline come September.

This matchup does receive some dings because obviously it came outside the August window, and I reduced the score just a tad because the wall does not appear to be the typical permanent stone wall.

Overall, this is definitely more support for the argument that people can indeed dream the future. Just as important, it also shows that a DreamForecaster can indeed pull out future headlines, which actually may not be such great news if you’ve read our last pre-August report  for Proj Aug (Report 5 is here).

   

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Copyright © 2014 Chris McCleary. Except for quotes, all rights reserved and any reference about this material requires a link back to this page.

Comments

Proj Aug: Wall of Fire Hits Big (Literally) — 3 Comments

  1. I have been on countless wildfires (I am a 12 year veteran firefighter/emt) and have never seen or heard of firefighters building any kind of wall so I do not believe this “wall” was constructed by firefighters, we build fire break trails by hand or bulldozer. Second I don’t think its a brick wall, I think maybe its a stack of large old wooden boxes used to put apples, pears etc in, I have often seen these used in the Northwest where I live, they are switching to plastic bins now so you often see stacks of the old worn out wood ones around. Just a guess.

  2. While reading this headline, my first thought was the Gaza conflict. Although the official attack started on 7/17, it escalated significantly 7/19-20. And the Gaza region is blocked off from the rest of Isreal by a stone (concrete) wall. Just a thought,

  3. Dean,

    I am glad you have joined us then, that is information I never would have known about, because I am not a fire fighter.

    I will keep an eye out in the news for other fire related events that have a wall around them to see if there are any other matches to this fire dream.

    Thank you,