Franklin Fire Aftermath 1: Talking with Wild Animals at Rocky Oaks Park – 20 December 2024 . by Alice B. Clagett

  • INTRODUCTION
  • VIDEO BY ALICE
  • SUMMARY OF THE VIDEO
  • VIDEO CREDITS
  • CONCLUSION

INTRODUCTION

Dear Ones,

In this video I am checking on the state of the Franklin Fire that started in Malibu. My location is Rocky Oaks Park, Santa Monica Mountains, California. There I am talking with the wildlife about the fire.

The sequel to this video will be filmed along the Pacific Coast Highway approaching Malibu.

VIDEO BY ALICE

SUMMARY OF THE VIDEO

“Franklin Fire Aftermath 1: Talking with Wild Animals at Rocky Oaks Park – 20 December 2024”
By Alice B. Clagett

Hello, Dear Ones, It’s Alice.

This is a report on the Franklin Fire which I think is nearly put out now. I am over here at the intersection of Mulholland Highway and Kanan Road in the Santa Monica Mountains. There is a very thin, bluish grey haze on the mountains and on the houses.

There is a little park here … Rocky Oaks Park … in which I just spent a few minutes.

I noticed that there are no animals around … and no birds to speak of … just one bird that I saw, a medium-sized bird, not a smaller bird like a sparrow … a little bigger.

I tried to check to see if there are any Ravens around; I called the Ravens, but nobody answered. Then a voice said … as it turned out it was an Owl … it said that the Ravens had all flown south.

I said: Did the Hawks stay here?

And the Owl said: Yes, the Hawks stayed here.

I asked: Did the Owls stay here?

That was because I did not know it was an Owl. I thought it was a Hawk. And it said … It has a more mournful voice than a Hawk but a similar low … how do you say? … whispering voice. It sounded like a male voice even though there are obviously both males and females.

The Owl said that the Owls stayed there.

I said: I did not see any Songbirds. Where are the Songbirds.

And the Owl said that the Songbirds had flown away.

If this is good intel, then it must be that the Ravens are helping the Songbirds to leave and telling them where they might go in cases of forest fire … just as they tell the Songbirds, when the Hawk is there, that they should ‘lay low’ so as not to be eaten.

. . . . .

I meant to mention, when I talked about the Ravens and the Franklin Fire in my last report, that it seems to me, during a fire or an emergency, that the Ravens are very well organized … and amongst the strong fliers … that would be the males … there will be one in one valley that looks for signs of fire and listens for intel from the valleys around it, and informs the Raven sentinel or sentinels over the ridge lines around its territory in the Santa Monica Mountains what is going on. So word spreads very quickly amongst the Ravens.

. . . . .

The other day, when I was on the Castro Peak Motorway, there was only one Raven that I saw, although there may have been others. Most likely there were quite a few others. Usually there are quite a few more Ravens around. So at least one Raven, or a few Ravens, must be staying in one ridgeline area, and then relaying information. They are Sentinels for the fire.

The Ravens know where the fire is right now. They have been telling me that the fire is over by the Pacific Ocean right now. Someone else said that the fire is in Trancas Canyon right now. I am going to go find out.

. . . . .

I should tell you also that I remember an incident that occurred while I was on Castro Peak Motorway: A helicopter went over, heading north from the Pacific Ocean. In the helicopter were some men. One of the men was in a state of upset and bereavement. One of his friends had been killed while fighting the forest fire.

We Lightworkers need to be ready, when people are going through the air like that … It often happens they have suffered bereavement, or they have seen an accident that involved loss of life … maybe of young couples, newlyweds, or of small babies … that upsets them quite a lot.

We have to be able to offer them a peaceful mind and a positive state of our own emotions so as to help them anchor in the higher realities, I feel.

. . . . .

Thanks to Mr. Owl for the help he gave. To Mr. Owl: Thank you very much for the information. I am very grateful.

Thank you to that brave Songbird for staying here. I am glad to see you.

Alice to Readers: It’s a ghost town here!

Here is where we are right now [shows trail sign]. It is called Rocky Oaks Loop Trail. It is a short trail; kind of a nice trail.

. . . . .

I came back to the car here at Rocky Oaks Trail and I asked one more time whether there was anybody around in this forest.

[Sees Raven flying overhead.] To Raven: Raven? Raven?

Raven speaks in a high, flutelike, anxious voice: There is a Hawk there. I cannot land there right now.

Alice to Raven: Ok.

Alice to Readers: Raven says there is a Hawk there so it cannot come around.

But anyway, I asked the Squirrels where they were.

And the Squirrels said: We went that way. [Alice points north.] They said: There is too much smoke here.

Alice to Readers: It seems like even the Squirrels have migrated to a quieter place.

. . . . .

A further update: I was about to leave … and I asked the Raven if that was a Hawk or an Owl over there, because it said it was an Owl. Somebody over that way [Alice points east, towards Kanan Road] … who will not say who they are (but they say they are not a Rabbit) says I should know that is a Hawk, not an Owl.

So I am guessing it is a Hawk, but it sounds rather lugubrious because of all the smoke here. That is what I am guessing.

There is a lot going on right now!

. . . . .

Over that way [points east, towards Kanan Road] … in the other direction from whatever it is, a Hawk or an Owl, I heard something that definitely sounded like a young Hawk.

The Young Hawk said: That guy [Alice points to the mystery bird] is a Hawk but he pretends he is an Owl.

I said: Oh, because Owls are protected?

The Young Hawk said: Exactly what it was.

Alice to Readers: I am here to say that Hawks and Owls and Ravens all are protected, along with most Songbirds, by a law that was passed in the 1900s. The only problem is that the enthusiasts for Owls are greater in number than the enthusiasts for Ravens and Hawks. That ought not be so, because the penalty is equal for injuring each of them .

. . . . .

I just heard a bird cry ‘Kew, kew, kew!’ I was not sure what kind of bird it was. Then the Hawk that feels mournful said: That is a different kind of Hawk, I think a smaller Hawk.

Then I heard a Raven say ‘Hawk’ in a sotto voce way, and I saw two Ravens fly over. The Ravens said nothing more.

Telepathically I said: The Ravens are not talking today.

Telepathically one of the Ravens said: Smoke hurts the throat.

. . . . .

Then I was thinking about the sad Hawk here.

Telepathically I said to the Hawk: The Mice have not gone away. Maybe you could find a Mouse.

Telepathically the Hawk said: Yes, I might find a Mouse.

Then on the telepathic plane I heard a great number of Mice saying, in a baritone voice: Don’t advise the Hawk of whom it might find.

Alice to Readers: I did not know that Mice had a voice that mighty. I guess when they are all banded together they can make that sound if they all think that thought at the same time. That is amazing. ‘Don’t advise that Hawk of whom it might find’.

. . . . .

There is a lot going on here today, I have to say … right here at the beginning of Rocky Oaks Trail.

I was mentioning to you what a big voice the Mice could make when they all decide to do so together.

Then on the telepathic plane I heard someone say over that way [Alice points east, towards Kanan Road] … that it was the Ranger over there who was making that sound.

And I said telepathically: Isn’t that the Mice talking?

And they did not say anything at all.

Then I said to all the wild animals that I had heard on the news that the Franklin Fire was nearly out.

The Big Hawk that is right there … the one I had mistaken for an Owl … said: It can’t be almost out, or it would not be so smoky.

I said: That is why I am going to go find out for myself.

Big Hawk said: ‘Don’t go too close to it’. It was thinking: ‘You might singe your wing feathers.’ Then it thought: ‘She does not have wing feathers’. Then it thought: ‘… or whatever’.

Alice to Readers: I hope that things are less tense over as I get closer to the fire.
We will just have to wait and see … [I am going to go find out what else is going on.]

. . . . .

Website

“Awakening with Planet Earth” … https://awakeningwithplanetearth.com ..

VIDEO CREDITS

“Franklin Fire Aftermath 1: Talking with Wild Animals at Rocky Oaks Park”
By Alice B. Clagett

Filmed on 20 December 2024
Produced on 22 December 2024
Location: Rocky Oaks Park, Santa Monica Mountains, CA

CC BY-SA 4.0 International

CONCLUSION

God bless you all,
And keep you safe,
And be with you
Through all your days.

In love, light and joy
This is Alice B. Clagett.
I Am of the Stars … and so are you!

Filmed on 20 December 2024; produced and published on 22 December 2024. Youtube transcript revised on 10 March 2026
This is a high-definition video.

NOTE: For other posts on the Franklin Fire search my site for the term: Franklin Fire

Franklin Fire Aftermath 1: Talking with Wild Animals at Rocky Oaks Park - 20 December 2024 (HD) .

Image: “Rocky Oaks Loop Trail,” by Alice B. Clagett, 20 December 2024, CC BY-SA 4.0 International, from “Awakening with Planet Earth,” https://awakeningwithplanetearth.com ..

Image: “Rocky Oaks Loop Trail,” by Alice B. Clagett, 20 December 2024, CC BY-SA 4.0 International, from “Awakening with Planet Earth,” https://awakeningwithplanetearth.com ..

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Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License (CC BY-SA 4.0). Attribution: By Alice B. Clagett.
More license information

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local news, Franklin Fire, interspecies communication, Santa Monica Mountains, birds, hawks, owls, ravens, songbirds, mice, squirrels,

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