When she returned home, her property had been reduced to ashes, but miraculously, her sheep had survived! Start the day smarter. Get all the news you need in your inbox each morning. Watch the video above to see the emotional moment a tearful owner is reunited with her sheep Humankind is your go-to spot for good news!
After making a shocking prediction that up to 70% of Pacific Palisades residents won’t return to rebuild and live in their homes, former “Million Dollar Listing” real estate agent Josh
Malibu's serene beauty before the wildfires included stunning coastlines and celebrity havens. Here's what the community looked like before the devastation.
Many experts say luck does play a part. But they also say there are many ways that homes can be made less vulnerable to fire.
“It’s a miracle — miracles never cease,” David Steiner, a 64-year-old Texan, told the New York Post. He said he never thought a wildfire would jump Pacific Coast Highway, the famed road that rolls along the Pacific Ocean, to where the property was along the beach.
A 55-year-old man was killed trying to protect his Malibu, Calif., home from the devastating wildfires in the Los Angeles area, according to his mother.
Amid the devastation in Malibu from the California wildfires, a USD 9-million mansion stands unscathed and defiant. Its owner, a retired waste-management executive, called it a "miracle". However, the three-storey house's survival is more of science than miracle.
Malibu and Santa Monica, is torching some of the most expensive real estate in the country, AccuWeather explains. Palisades Fire likely to be most expensive ever “These fast-moving, wind-driven infernos have created one of the costliest wildfire ...
Many families in California are full of grief and questions about what more they could have done to save their loved ones from the deadly wildfires.
A series of bone-chilling before and after images of celebrities' multimillion-dollar Los Angeles homes has laid bare the extent of the destruction caused by the California wildfires —revealing a glimpse at the horrifying impact the blazes have had on many communities in the area.
Gov. Gavin Newsom lifted California's environmental review process for building laws for victims who lost their homes during the wildfire.
The 10,396-acre Hughes fire reached 56% containment Friday as first responders made progress controlling multiple blazes burning in Los Angeles County, which is expected to receive rain over the weekend that could be capable of producing floods and mudslides in several burned areas.