Hey guys,
Thanks for the comments so far.
As you know, to get the fire shots the house was actually burning. (the hose close by in case anything got out of hand, which it did.)
The pictures were a different challenge. To be honest, I've never really used this camera at night. I had plenty of lighting when the fire was going, but that came to an end very quickly. So, I set the camera on ISO (high sensitivity) and used the light trailers as much as I could. Everywhere I needed extra light I used a rather dim (so not to over do it) mini flashlight, like in the ambulance shot.
The only shots that kind of came out fuzzy were the ones taken right at twilight, and I've always had a problem with this camera and those shots.
Hope that kind of explained things... I'm no photography expert by any means.
- Ben