- Elizabeth Larson
- Posted On
Boyds remembered for service, love of community and family
LAKE COUNTY, Calif. — Friends and family are remembering a Clearlake couple for their contributions to the community after both died last week as the result of a motorcycle crash in Napa County.
Ronnie Boyd Jr., 51, died at the scene of the crash on Sunday, June 11, and his wife, Dena Boyd, 52, died two days later.
They’ve been memorialized this past week with a moment of silence at the Clearlake City Council meeting, a remembrance post on Facebook from Cal Fire, Ronnie Boyd’s employer, and in numerous social media posts by friends and family.
“We extend our deepest sympathies to Captain Boyd's family, friends, and colleagues during this difficult time. #neverforget,” Cal Fire headquarters and the Cal Fire Humboldt-Del Norte Unit posted on their Facebook pages on June 12, the day after his death.
“Ronnie and Dena were a huge part of this community for many years, and great friends to many,” said friend and neighbor Pastor Tee Stacy.
A procession is planned for Tuesday to bring Ronnie Boyd’s body home to Lake County from Napa County, said his daughter, Rachel Weidner. Additional details will be released early in the week.
Those who knew them are struggling with the loss of a vibrant, involved and loving couple, who took pride in their family and their community, and had a lot left to do.
The couple also were preparing to celebrate their 10th wedding anniversary in August, said Weidner.
They had gone for an afternoon motorcycle ride last Sunday when something went wrong.
The California Highway Patrol’s Napa Area office reported that the couple was riding a 2015 Harley Davidson motorcycle northbound on Butts Canyon Road north of James Creek Road at an unknown speed when, for reasons that remain under investigation, the motorcycle went off the east edge of the roadway and down a hillside, where it crashed.
The Boyds were thrown from the motorcycle. Ronnie Boyd died at the scene and Dena Boyd was airlifted to Santa Rosa Memorial Hospital with major injuries. She died on Tuesday.
A passion for firefighting
Ronnie Boyd spent nearly 30 years working his way up through the firefighting ranks before becoming a captain with Cal Fire in the Humboldt area.
Boyd began his firefighting career as a volunteer at Lakeshore Fire in Clearlake, before it became Lake County Fire, in March of 1995.
“At the time he worked at Homestake Mine but that was just his job, firefighting was always his passion. He was eventually promoted to a volunteer captain,” Weidner said.
“Growing up our lives revolved around the station, it was a second home and family not just for my dad but the whole family,” Weidner said.
After the Homestake Mine closed at the end of 2001, Weidner said her father decided he wanted to make firefighting his career.
In 2003, he joined Cal Fire — before it changed its name from the California Department of Forestry — as a seasonal firefighter in the Sonoma-Lake-Napa Unit during the summer, working construction jobs through the winter and continuing to volunteer at the local fire department anytime he was home, Weidner said.
Cal Fire reported that Boyd was promoted to a limited-term fire apparatus engineer in 2007, was promoted to a permanent fire apparatus engineer position in the Sonoma-Lake-Napa Unit in 2009 and then moved to a limited-term fire captain position in the Shasta-Trinity Unit.
Eventually, Boyd was hired by Cal Fire as a permanent employee and in 2015 he decided to step back from volunteering in the Lake County Fire Protection District, Weidner said.
“He still loved the department and very much thought of it as family but being a full-time firefighter and then serving during his limited time off was nearly impossible,” she said.
It was as a Cal Fire employee that Boyd became friends with Greg Bertelli, who later became a Cal Fire division chief before retiring in February 2021.
Bertelli told Lake County News that he and Boyd worked together at the Cal Fire Middletown station for almost four years.
“I could tell you how dependable he was, how he always had a calm demeanor at an incident, how he had an infectious smile and laugh. He never would try to sugar coat an opinion. All of these would be true,” said Bertelli.
“What I remember most is how much he loved and was proud of his children. I would get an update on what colleges his son was looking at. He would have a smile from ear to ear talking about him. I remember coming back from a fire call at 2 a.m. listening to Alicia Keys singing ‘No One’ mainly because Ronnie said how much his daughter enjoyed the song. That is how I remember Ronnie,” Bertelli added.
In 2016, Boyd was promoted to a permanent fire captain position in the Humboldt-Del Norte Unit where he worked for the rest of his life.
Great neighbors, proud grandparents
Stacy said she doesn’t remember when she met Ronnie Boyd, but he and his younger brothers, Jessie and Guy were just youngsters, about the same ages as Stacy’s own three sons.
“I remember Ronnie acting like he was more of a dad than a big brother. He made an impression on me, and I will never forget that,” she said.
“Years passed and I lost track of Ronnie, until I married my husband, and we bought a house in Clearlake. And Ronnie lived down the street from us. Through the many years of being neighbors we became pretty good friends. I watched his children grow, witnessed Ronnie’s work ethic, kindness to others, and his service to the community as a firefighter,” Stacy said.
She recalled Boyd having a wonderful sense of humor, being a redneck and set in his ways. He loved to hunt and to be outdoors, and was a great neighbor who looked out for others.
Stacy said she and her husband Jim didn’t know Dena Boyd as well as they did her husband, however, they liked her very much. “She was always smiling, and she too had a great sense of humor. She loved Ronnie, and he loved her very much.”
Stacy said the Boyds were wonderful grandparents to Weidner’s little girl Raegan. “Ronnie would light up with pride every time he talked about Raegan and being Papa Ronnie. And Dena loved being Raegan’s ‘Mimi.’”
Weidner added, “Of all their titles, Papa Ronnie and Mimi were their favorite. They loved being grandparents and it brought them endless joy. Dena's favorite thing to do was shop for the grandkids, making sure they all had the perfect Christmas or birthday gift or even putting together a little something for each holiday or new season.”
“My husband and I miss them terribly and will never forget them. Our hope is to see them again one day,” Stacy said.
Weidner said Saturday that the timeline for the Tuesday processing was still being finalized, with Cal Fire expected to release additional details soon.
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