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Mountain View News Saturday, June 7, 2025
Mountain View News Saturday, June 7, 2025
CHRISTOPHER Nyerges
[Nyerges is an educator and the author of over two dozen books including “Urban Survival
Guide,” “Extreme Simplicity,” “Foraging Californai,” and other books. More information at www.
SchoolofSelf-Reliance.com]
OH HAPPY DAYS
- THE NEXUS OF
THE ALTADENA
COMMUNITY
MEET HANDSOME MR. CLARENCE!
Born in 2021, Mr. Clarence is
an Abyssinian mix with tabby
markings, crisp white socks,
and a lot of opinions. He
enjoys long chats, head massages,
and treats—especially
treats.
He may greet you with a hiss
at first, but don’t be fooled—
it’s all bark and no bite. Offer him a snack and you’ll see
just how quickly he warms
up. He’s a big boy with a
big personality and would
thrive with someone who
appreciates his quirks and
conversational skills.
Although he may be shy at
first, especially in new surroundings, Mr. Clarence blossoms
into his true charming self when he feels comfortable, and
he did well with another cat friend--haha, just watch that he
doesn't try to eat the other cat's food! Could you be the one
to turn his hisses into kisses and provide him with the love
and understanding he deserves?
Fully vetted upon delivery. Apply to meet Mr. C. and see
more pics of him at https://www.lifelineforpets.org/mr-clarence.html.
For the last 40 years, John Hopkins has operated O
Happy Day Vegan Cafe and Grocery, a health food
store and restaurant on Lake Avenue, next to the Altadena
Post Office. It was a mecca for vegetarians,
vegans, lovers of organic foods made fresh daily, those
enthusiastic about health food, vitamins and supplements
of all kinds, and organic groceries.
One could get a revolving variety of homemade style
soups, organic salads, sandwiches, along with a changing
roster of entrees and desserts made with loving
hands.
UNTIL JANUARY 7…
January 7th was violently windy. O Happy Day Sous-
chef Sev was in a class in Highland Park when his yoga
teacher Stella broke the news to him: “Altadena is on
fire.”
Sev raced toward an inferno now known as the Eaton
Fire consuming the hillsides, arriving at the cafe at
9:45 p.m. “The power was out, but John was acting as
if nothing were wrong,” he explains. “The wind was
strong, traffic lights were dark, and people were taking
intersections like careless maniacs. KFI radio was
saying Pasadena had evacuated. John balked when I
asked, ‘When are we getting out of here?’”
“We’re not getting out of here; we’re staying to fight the
fire -- as if we need to. It’ll never even make it down
here. The wind is blowing it in the other direction and
up the mountain,” responded Hopkins.
“I didn’t think anything was wrong,” added Hopkins.
“I smelled the fire, but it was faraway in the distance,
and the wind seemed to be blowing it away from us.”
“I walked up to the intersection,” Sev says, “to look at
the forest fire. There was near collision after near collision
from the smoke and lights being out. The shifting
wind was so strong it was pushing me against and
away from the Jack in the Box fence. It was mesmerizing
to see the whole mountain burning. I returned to
the cafe and found John there -- washing dishes in the
dark with a bike flashlight on his head!! I asked him
why and he calmly replied, ‘I’m preparing for tomorrow.’
He was sure it would be a normal day in Altadena
with a burnt hillside. Forest fire blazing, panicked
people racing, no electricity, and he’s washing dishes
like nothing’s going on, nothing’s amiss, and that actually
calmed me down. He’s been at this location for
decades; he must know better than I do.”
Sev explained that he receiving panicked texts from
vegan activist and friend of the store Samantha Lau of
Plant Based Treaty (plantbasedtreaty.org), asking if the
cafe was evacuating, and he responded no.
Sev thought everything would be okay and sat down
to read a book in the dark with a flashlight, waiting
for the electricity to come back on. After an arduous
series of yoga classes, trying to read in the dark put
him to sleep.
Sev explains that his car horn made a long, plaintive
wail.
The battering winds outside sounded like firemen trying
to break in. “That made surreal sense, just my car
honking at me for no reason, nothing to be alarmed
about. Maybe someone's breaking into it? Then came
a series of tremendous explosions. That did not make
sense,” he continued. He went out the back door into
the parking lot to investigate. It was 5:00 a.m. and the
sky was completely black. The only light was coming
from a glowing line of cars burning: Hopkin’s work
trucks and Sev’s convertibles. They were already fully
consumed, incinerated. The explosions had come
from their gas tanks exploding. They were glowing red
and grey like charcoal hibachis after the flames have
done their worst.
“This has to be a dream,” Sev remembers thinking.
“This doesn't happen in real life.” But a line of postal
trucks was also on fire next door, and the palm tree
and brush, even the leaves on the ground were going
up in flames. “I turned to look at the cafe and noticed
its roof was on fire. It would have killed us, breathing
smoke and sleeping inside in the dark. I had to save
John, so I ran back in to get him.”
“Your trucks are gone. The roof is glowing” continues
Sev, who dragged Hopkins out the front to confirm
that his precious restaurant really was ablaze. “John
was convinced that all the smoke was just from the distant
forest, never imagining that the store was going
up in flames.” But all the smoke was coming from the
structure. Standing outside, Hopkins confirmed the
roof was somehow burning and groped his way to the
back to check on his trucks. They were burned up. Sev
was calling for a fire extinguisher and hose.
“I had hoped it was all a dream, a misunderstanding,
just what my blurry eyes were misperceiving in the
smoke” Sev explains. “We never got any evacuation
notice here west of Lake Ave. KFI was still playing in
the background. Coast to Coast didn't break in with
any Emergency Alert System or public service announcement
to get out or be ready to evacuate.
Hopkins shoved a big fire extinguisher into Sev’s arms.
By now the flames were eating the wall above the entrance.
Sev aimed and fired until the flames were extinguished
-- only to burst back at full force seconds
later. "I need a water hose. Bring me a hose, John!" he
yelled. "The smoke was getting worse, and as I stood
battling flames, I suddenly realized I would die not because
of the fire in front of me but the one causing the
roof to cave in. There was no hose to be had. Lotus
Management had shut off all outdoor water so tenants
wouldn't waste it by hosing down the sidewalk. Even a
water key wouldn't get water out of the outdoor spigots
because water had been shut off to them. If there
were a water hose, I could've stopped the fire. No other
storefronts on the block were burning, just the postal
trucks in the back. Our roof was first,” he explained,
“and the fire spread quickly with the wind."
Sev grabbed what property of Hopkin's he could, nothing
of his own but his laptop, never dreaming the fire
department would let the place burn to the ground. "I
thought we would come back to massive water damage,
not incinerated ashes," Sev says.
"In fact, a fire truck stationed itself on Mendicino behind
the by Chase Bank, firemen staring at a burning
structure, only to confer with one another and race
away. "I thought for sure they'd extinguish that fire
then turn around and knock ours down. They did
nothing but drive away, going west. I was at a loss
to explain what any of the sirens, lights, or speeding
emergency vehicles were for."
Both Sev and Hopkins finally managed to get into the
back yard through the darkness. Hopkins grabbed
what he could, like his cash register, but forgetting his
wallet and glasses. Sev thought they could come back
later and get all their stuff. Sev adds, “I never dreamed
that the Fire Department wouldn’t come and hose it
down!"
Once outside, Sev asked John if he needed anything
left inside, but Hopkins told him, “No, it's too dangerous!
You’d be crazy to try to go back in!”
Sev points out that he wondered why no firemen had
arrived and why no homeowners were defending nearby
homes and businesses. He had no idea the town
had already evacuated. “Everything was going unprotected.
I thought they must be sleeping unaware of the
danger,” said Sev.
With only one surviving vehicle, hardly able to shift
into gear, they escaped. But Hopkins was desperate
to see that his house was safe, having just paid off the
mortgage after 30 years. So rather than driving away
from the danger, they drove toward it, up Lake Avenue
to Las Flores Avenue.
North Altadena was a ghost town, dark and smoky,
with no moving vehicles. Emergency vehicles raced
up the street then back down only to stop and then to
speed off. Hopkins assumed they were assessing the
situation.
Sev relates that they got up to John Hopkins’ home
around 5:30 a.m, to find it on fire. “It was totally consumed
when we got there,” said Sev, “and no other
houses were yet burning.” They ran into downed power
lines that hit the car. Hopkins cried out, “Let’s get
out of here!” Sev realized they were about to be electrocuted
unless he could maneuver around the wires.
Driving south on Lake Avenue, they saw that some
buildings burning, others fine in an inexplicable pattern.
According to Hopkins, “They were fighting the
fire at Aldi’s with a very weak stream of water. It was
approaching 6:00 a.m., but no sky, only thick smoke.”
Police started to block Lake, sending everyone south.
"Unable to stay in the area, which was chaotic and full
of burning buildings, we took refuge with vegan friend
Samantha Lau. Once fed and rested, we tried to return
to Altadena but were denied access by a line of police.
We knew our lives were forever changed,” said Sev.
They were advised to take shelter at the Pasadena Convention
Center at the American Red Cross relief site,
where a thousand or more evacuees had been directed
into large conference rooms full of volunteers. They
stayed there for weeks, sleeping on cots, daily getting
vegan meals from Plant Based Treaty volunteers and
many vegan restaurant-donors who served everyone.
Quaker Friends helped Sev, and restaurant patrons offered
to take Hopkins in until his older sister in Rialto
made space for him.
He plans to rebuild his Altadena home with a fireproof
design. A non-profit cooperative has developed to revive
Oh Happy Day Vegan Cafe on or near Lake Avenue.
The old site is too devastated to rebuild anytime
soon. A Go Fund Me has been established.
SIDEBAR 1
“People ask why we didn't run or evacuate. We had no
idea Altadena was on fire or in any danger of burning.
Irritating smoke maybe, high winds, ashes, but
not fire. Eaton Canyon, the Cobb Estate, White City
on Mt. Lowe might feed a brushfire and travel up, but
not the residences and stores. I volunteer as a Native
American docent at the Eaton Canyon Nature Center
(ecnca.org). Fire is a natural part of the ecosystem's
cycle. Had Los Angeles tended its foothills and watershed
the way the ancient ancestors did, this could never
happen. Here I was to protect a nearly 80-year-old
vegan legend and the restaurant he built. This is seva
in yoga, a Buddhist act of compassion, what anybody
here might have done, Tim, or Jamie, the store's masseuse,
Janell, or its matron Corn Woman.” -- Sous-
chef Sev
SIDEBAR 2
According to Jane Tsong, artist and conservation planner,
“Stepping into Oh Happy Day feels like stepping
into a different world, where values and people and
even the speed of time are different.”
Pet of the Week
Momo is a 3-year-old, tall and dashing adventurer
who's ready to be your loyal sidekick! Momo is a
Chow mix, and despite the fluffy coat, we “only”
weighs about 65 pounds.
Momo's got personality! He’s sweet and
affectionate, and he’s even been described as “a
pro snuggler”. While he can be a little nervous
with strangers, he warms up very quickly,
especially when he’s getting tasty snacks. He’s also
very quick to show off the tricks he’s learned- he's
a master at “sit” (when he wants to sit, that is). He’s
also learning “shake”, but it seems like he’s just
in a hurry to get back to one of his new favorite
activities- splashing in the pool!
When he’s not splashing around, he enjoys going
on hikes and long walks, and exploring the
outdoors. He’s always up for a game of fetch and if
you’re lucky enough, he’ll even bring the toy back
to you.
Momo has had experience living with other dogs, so he might be a good companion
for a similar-sized buddy.
Whether lounging by your side or exploring the outdoors, Momo will bring joy,
loyalty, and a touch of goofy charm into your life. He’ll even help keep you cool on
a hot day. Ready for an adventurous, affectionate companion? Momo’s your guy!The
adoption fee for dogs is $150. All dog adoptions include spay or neuter, microchip,
and age-appropriate vaccines.
Walk-in adoptions are available every day from 10:00 – 5:00. View photos of
adoptable pets at pasadenahumane.org.
New adopters will receive a complimentary health-and-wellness exam from VCA
Animal Hospitals, as well as a goody bag filled with information about how to care
for your pet.
The O Happy Days store, pre-fire.
Mountain Views News 80 W Sierra Madre Blvd. No. 327 Sierra Madre, Ca. 91024 Office: 626.355.2737 Fax: 626.609.3285 Email: editor@mtnviewsnews.com Website: www.mtnviewsnews.com
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