'The sky was getting darker. Then there was that smell of smoke'published at 14:08 BST
James Kelly
BBC News
Image source, Shelagh ChapmanPeter Chapman and his wife Shelagh have a holiday home they've owned for 20 years in Mojácar - a short drive from the Los Gallardos wildfire.
They first saw signs of the fire on Thursday evening. "I thought, ‘there’s a storm coming,’ because the sky was getting darker. Then there was that smell of smoke in the air," Peter tells BBC.
"You could see a glow in the sky in the distance.The only way I can describe it is by thinking of how my mother used to describe the London bombings during the Second World War. It was surreal," he says.
The couple went to bed as normal, and say they woke this morning to ash in the sky and smoke in the air.
"We’re still able to sit outside and we’re not being affected by the smoke at the moment. We’ve seen a number of aircraft in the sky, which we think are picking up water to douse the flames."
Image source, Shelagh Chapman

















