Email this article   Print article 


SoCal VARs Begin To Come Back After Fire

By Joseph F. Kovar
October 26, 2007    3:55 PM ET

Page 2 of 2

On Friday morning, Geier and his family got word they could head back. Of the five houses on the private street on which his house sits, the two on the other side had burned while the three on his side were standing. However, they were not unscathed. The fire had burned the landscape in front and had melted many of the underground plastic pipes in the sprinkler system.

The yard burned right up until the area Geier had planted with ice plants, which stopped the fire. Ice plants are succulent plants which store a lot of water, and are found throughout Southern California, where they are considered in some areas an invasive species.

However, those ice plants saved more homes that Geier's.

John Matze, vice president of business development at Hifn, a Los Gatos, Calif.-based storage vendor which purchased his previous company Siafu Software, said his home in Poway, Calif. in San Diego County was saved by ice plants.

Matze's home had a city-mandated buffer space of ice plants in the back yard, and had a clear landscape in front. Many of his neighbors' homes that were not burned also had ice plants. "I used to bitch about the water bill, but I don't now," he said.

Matze and his family was forced to evacuate Monday morning at 4:00 am. By 10:00 am Monday, he drove back to his neighborhood to see if he had a home. "I got to the top of the winding road by the house, and saw fires on the right and left, and a fire coming up the road," he said.

He left, but by 1:00 he was back again with his son. They used his garden hose to put out a few small fires in the yard, then helped neighbors put out fires in the neighborhood.

On Tuesday, Matze was in San Jose on a business trip, but his wife wanted to go home. She was stopped by authorities, but was determined to go back, and so she grabbed some food she bought and drove home by some side streets and spent that night at home. "The fires were out, and it was safe," he said. "Plus, she could help the neighbors."

The fires burned to with two blocks of Matze's house, and destroyed the roughs in the golf course that backs up against his rear fence.

The Hifn office in Poway was not hurt by the fires. The only close call among local employees was the director of engineering, whose house just missed being consumed by fires which came right up to the windows of his house. "But he had ice plants," he said.

Nth Generation, a solution provider with an office in the Rancho Bernardo area, which was especially hard hit, is back in full operation after being closed a couple days. The fires had burned to a point just across the road from the office before they were finally put out. No one was hurt from Nth Generation from the fires.

Storage vendor Iomega's office and the homes of several personnel were evacuated on Monday because of the fire, but the office was back up and running normally by Wednesday, said CEO Jonathan Huberman.

Huberman woke up Monday morning to see a giant wall of black smoke coming his way. He said the fire burned to within two miles of his home. He and his family moved in with friends in La Jolla, a suburb of San Diego on the ocean. "It was an interesting time, especially for the kids," he said.

The office was in a mandatory evacuation zone, but the fire was never any closer than five miles, so there was no real danger, Huberman said. It was closed Monday and Tuesday, and reopened on Wednesday. "Less than 20 percent of Iomega's people work at the headquarters," he said. "Sales and shipping weren't affected. We have almost no sales guys in San Diego, and shipping isn't done there at all.

Craig Zarley contributed to this report

<< Previous | 1 | 2

To continue reading this article, please download the free CRN Tech News app for your iPad or Windows 8 device.
Related: Videos | Slide Shows | Comments

SHARE THIS ARTICLE

More Channel Programs

Recent Articles

Women Of The Channel: Advice For The Next Generation

CRN's Women of the Channel pays it forward to the next generation by giving advice to young women aspiring to succeed in the workplace.

Power 100: The Most Powerful Women Of The Channel 2013 (Part 2)

The Power 100 is culled from the ranks of CRN's Women of the Channel and spotlights those female executives whose insight and influence in their respective companies help drive channel success. Here's Part 2 of the list.

Power 100: The Most Powerful Women Of The Channel 2013 (Part 1)

The Power 100 is culled from the ranks of CRN's Women of the Channel and spotlights those female executives whose insight and influence in their respective companies help drive channel success. Here's Part 1 of the list.

  More Slide Shows




Related Videos
Loading...