Kim built her house in Chumok-ri village herself when she first moved there from the city but, like most houses in the area, it was totally destroyed by the blazes that killed 28 people.
"My heart feels like it's going to burst even now speaking about it," she told AFP.
Wildfires tore through much of the southeast over the past week, destroying an ancient temple and priceless national treasures, threatening UNESCO-listed villages and burning numerous small villages to the ground.
The inferno has also laid bare South Korea's demographic crisis and regional disparities: it is a super-aged society with the world's lowest birth rate, and rural areas are both underpopulated and disproportionately elderly.
Just over half of South Korea's entire population lives in the greater Seoul area and the countryside has been hollowed out, with families moving to cities for better jobs and education opportunities.
Most of the victims of the fire, which hit deeply rural Andong and Uiseong hardest, were "in their 60s and 70s", an official from the Korea Forest Service told AFP.
In farmer Kim's district, 62 percent of residents are 60 or older. Her neighbour, 79-year-old Lee Sung-gu, who is also an apple farmer, said he felt powerless to act as his village went up in flames.
- 'Like a warzone' -
"All the houses were completely burnt down and it was like a total war zone," Lee told AFP.
"I didn't have the strength to put the fire out. I didn't have the courage to do it, I could only just watch," he said.
Vast numbers of people moved from the countryside to growing cities in search of employment and prosperity as the South industrialised in the decades after the Korean War and rose to become a global technology and cultural powerhouse.
The trend continues -- the number of people in farming families fell from 4,400,000 to 2,089,000 between 1998 and 2023, figures from Statistics Korea show.
While farmers only account for four percent of the entire South Korean population, 52.6 percent of them are aged 65 or older, according to government data.
For many elderly residents who have watched their houses go up in flames, it is hard to see how they can recover at their age.
"Right now, it's devastating, heartbreaking, and horrific," villager Kim Seung-weon, 73, told AFP inside his severely burned house, a melted air conditioner and charred sofa behind him.
Damaged jangdok -- traditional jars typically used by older Koreans to ferment soybean paste -- were seen alongside burned-down structures and roofs outside.
"I'm at a crossroads, struggling with the thought of life and death. The trauma and stress are extremely overwhelming," he said.
- No safety net -
Jeon Young-soo, a professor at Hanyang University's Graduate School of International Studies, said the wildfires revealed "the severity of the issues surrounding an ultra-ageing society and regional disparities" in South Korea.
"Due to the lack of a younger population in rural areas, the absence of a safety net for disasters and infrastructure has become very much evident," he told AFP.
Some locals have complained that villages were left to fend for themselves.
The governor of Yeongyang, where 55 percent of its 15,271 residents are aged 60 or older, issued a statement on Friday urging the town's citizens to help by clearing embers and looking after their neighbours.
Six of the 28 victims were from Yeongyang.
He also reported that no helicopters had been deployed in the past three days and called on the central government for additional support.
The wildfire fatalities included a pilot in his 70s whose helicopter crashed Wednesday while trying to contain the blaze.
"It's really heartbreaking -- I heard the pilot served for about 40 years," Kang Yong-suk, a 74-year-old resident of Andong, told AFP.
"I've heard that many of the victims had limited mobility due to their age. We're all very scared and feel helpless."
Rain gives some respite to South Korea firefighters as death toll rises
Yeongdeok (South Korea) (AFP) Mar 28, 2025 -
Overnight rain helped douse some of South Korea's worst-ever wildfires, authorities said Friday, as the death toll from the unprecedented blazes raging for nearly a week reached 28.
More than a dozen fires have ravaged large areas of the country's southeast, destroying an ancient temple, and forcing around 37,000 people to evacuate.
The flames blocked roads and knocked out communication lines, causing residents to flee in panic as fireballs rained down on cars stuck in traffic jams to escape the area.
The flames have been fanned by high winds and ultra-dry conditions, with the area experiencing below-average rains for months after South Korea experienced its hottest year on record in 2024.
But overnight Thursday it rained in the affected area, helping firefighters to contain some of the worst blazes.
"The rain that fell from the afternoon into the early morning aided the firefighting efforts," Korea Forest Service chief Lim Sang-seop said.
The rain "reduced the haze, improving visibility, and the cooler temperatures compared to other days create very favourable conditions for firefighting efforts", he said.
South Korea's interior ministry said a total of 28 people had been killed as of Friday morning, and 37 others were injured -- nine seriously.
The fatalities include a pilot in his 70s whose helicopter crashed Wednesday while trying to contain a fire, as well as four firefighters and other workers who lost their lives after being trapped by rapidly advancing flames.
- Hottest year in 2024 -
More than 2,240 houses in the region have been destroyed, according to the latest figures, and an official said Thursday more than 35,000 hectares (86,500 acres) of forest have been burned.
The extent of damage makes it South Korea's largest-ever wildfire, after an inferno in April 2000 that scorched 23,913 hectares across the east coast.
The fire also destroyed several historic sites, including the Gounsa temple complex in Uiseong, which is believed to have been originally built in the 7th century.
Among the damaged structures at the temple are two state-designated "treasures," one of which is a pavilion built in 1668 that overlooks a stream.
Last year was South Korea's hottest on record, although temperatures in the months running up to the blaze had been colder than last year and in line with the country's 30-year average, Korea Meteorological Administration data shows.
But the fire-hit region had been experiencing unusually dry weather with below-average precipitation.
According to the interior ministry, the wildfires were accidentally started by a grave visitor and "sparks from a brush cutter".
Both the devastating California wildfires in January and the fires in South Korea are similar, said Kimberley Simpson, fellow in nature-based climate solutions at the University of Sheffield's School of Biosciences.
"Both were preceded by unusually warm, dry conditions that left vegetation highly flammable, and both were intensified by strong winds that spread the flames and hampered firefighting efforts," she said.
"Only three months into 2025, we've already witnessed record-breaking wildfire activity in multiple regions.
"As climate change drives rising temperatures and alters rainfall patterns, the conditions that give rise to these devastating fires are becoming more frequent."
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