• CREATE AN ACCOUNT
  • LOG.IN
  • CONTENTS
  • CLASSIFIEDS
  • ARCHIVE
  • INFO | ADVERTISING | CONTACT US

  • Home
  • News
    • News Main Page
    • NewsFlash
  • A&E
    • A&E Main Page
    • Movie Times
    • TV Listings
    • A&E Blog
    • Art Galleries
    • Best Bets
  • Opinion
    • Opinion Main Page
    • Blogs
    • Columns
    • Voices
    • Letters
    • In Memoriam
    • Obituaries
  • Events
    • Today
    • Search
    • Submit
    • Best Bets
  • Living
    • Living Main Page
    • Outdoors
    • Travel
    • Sports
    • Peeps
  • Food & Drink
    • Food & Drink Main Page
    • All Restaurants
    • Delivery
    • All Bars & Clubs
    • Drink Specials
    • Open Now
  • Sports
  • Outdoors
    • Outdoors Main Page
    • Outside Insider
    • Spotlight On
    • Features
  • Classifieds
    • Real Estate
    • Jobs
    • Autos
  • Obits

Ray Ford

Wider view looking back towards the Paradise area shows how far the Alexander ridge still is from th river.


Zaca Fire Heads into New Territory

Active Fire Line Expands Dramatically; Fire May Threaten Santa Barbara


Monday, August 6, 2007
By Ray Ford (Contact)
Article Tools
Print friendly
E-mail story
Contact an Editor
iPod friendly
Comments
Bookmark This
del.icio.us. del.icio.us.
Digg! Digg!
furl furl
google google
newsvine newsvine
reddit reddit
technorati technorati
Facebook Facebook
Yahoo! My Web 2.0 Yahoo!

The Basics: Acres Burned: 67,675; Cost to Date: $50.3 million

Is This the Big Fire?

Three weeks ago, on July 17, Santa Barbara County Fire Chief John Scherrei told the Board of Supervisors the Zaca Fire had the potential to become the largest fire in California history. “In a nutshell,” he told them, “this is a very dangerous fire.”

Saddle on Mission Pine trail where the fire blew through on its way down towards the Sisquoc River. Note the vertical clifss and heavy scrub oak.
Click to enlarge photo

Ray Ford

Saddle on Mission Pine trail where the fire blew through on its way down towards the Sisquoc River. Note the vertical clifss and heavy scrub oak.

“The country back there is like a bucketful of shark’s teeth,” Scherrei added at a community meeting just last week. “It is very difficult to operate; very difficult terrain to fight a fire. It's like a mattress fire; it just keeps on smoldering then bursts back to life. With a mattress you’ve got to cut it up into little pieces and soak it good with water if you want to get it out.”

The problem with the backcountry, however, even with larger helicopter’s known as the “heavies”, dropping a thousand gallons of water on any part of the fire is like what one fire fighter called “spitting into the wind.” If you have a significant ridge you need to hold and have dozer lines, engine crews, hotshots and overhead support from air attack available in abundance, more than likely you can hold the main ridges.

Ray Ford

Crews burn out the Alexander ridge to control the spread of the fire so it does not go down into the Paradise area. The danger to this area has lessened.

Crews have done a spectacular job of holding high points such as the Zaca and McKinley ridges and just yesterday the east-west ridge running from Little Pine Mountain west past Alexander Peak to Old Man Mountain. With the wind at their backs, crews deliberately burned out the brush on the backside of the Alexander ridge, creating a 5,000’ tall plume of smoke that had spectators at the Observation Point on Highway 154 fearing the fire had blown out again late in the afternoon.

Up close, firing the brush to burn it out is a dangerous job. A shift in wind could cost a life.
Click to enlarge photo

Courtesy of Forest Service

Up close, firing the brush to burn it out is a dangerous job. A shift in wind could cost a life.

With today’s morning fog — almost a misty drizzle — Paradise, Rosario Park and Camino Cielo residents can rest assured that the danger is over for them.

New Threats Emerge

While there are successes such as this, the fire has proven almost impossible to put out. Friday’s dramatic blowup forced firefighters on the defensive as the flames moved on a ten-mile-wide front towards Buckhorn Road. Unfortunately, they were not able to hold the Buckhorn.

"This is absolutely huge," one fire fighter told me. "With the San Rafael Wilderness you had topography that was well defined, with the ridges funneling everything east. Once it moved over into the Dick Smith you've got completely different topography — and a lot of it flows directly towards Santa Barbara."

Over the weekend the road was breached in a few places and fire command considered requesting use of dozers on the ridges on either side on the edges of the San Rafael and Dick Smith Wildernesses.

Huge plume burst forth through an inversion layer over the Little Pin Mountain area.
Click to enlarge photo

Ray Ford

Huge plume burst forth through an inversion layer over the Little Pin Mountain area.

Yesterday the point became moot when the wind shifted direction and began pushing the fire line northeast. This was great for Santa Barbara because it kept the ash away but not so good for fire fighters who watched the fire line spread into brush that hadn’t burned in the earlier runs. Areas most affected included Grapevine Canyon in the area near Jackrabbit Flats and the upper parts of the East Fork of Santa Cruz Canyon.

By day’s end the fire had crossed almost the entire length of Buckhorn Road from Little Pine to Big Pine Mountain — more than a ten-mile section — causing the fire to expand dramatically into the Dick Smith Wilderness and, more ominously, towards Santa Barbara. What had been a relatively narrow fire confined to the deep interior of the backcountry now has more than twenty miles of uncontrolled fire line that now has multiple heads, with each posing its own threat.

The Zaca Fire has not only moved into an entirely new phase, there is a potential for major fire growth, loss of huge chunks of habitat and a serious threat to the South Coast.

Sisquoc River

Every effort once the fire crossed the Manzana and moved up onto Hurricane Deck has been directed towards keeping the fire out of the Sisquoc, both to protect Tepusquet on the east, to avoid a massive burnout on the south facing slopes of the Sierra Madres and to keep it from spreading into the Dick Smith Wilderness.

Yesterday the fire blew up Grapevine Canyon, over Mision Pine Ridge about a mile east of the Basin and started down into the Sisquoc about a mile above Heath Camp.

A second command enter is now being established in New Cuyama and an additional Type 1 incident management team is heading there to take command of the fire on the north (Sisquoc, Sierra Madres, upper Dick Smith Wilderness). Expansion of the fire line here may take it onto the Sierra Madres, up the Sisquoc and over into the Dick Smith Wilderness at Alamar Saddle. Should the fire continue down Alamar there is a potential for it to burn out a large portion of the upper Dick Smith Wilderness and eventually reach the Ventura County line near Potrero Seco.

Fire Crew wraps Bluff Admin Building at the base of Big Pine Mountain with heat reflective material. There is no word if the cabin survived.
Click to enlarge photo

Courtesy of Forest Service

Fire Crew wraps Bluff Admin Building at the base of Big Pine Mountain with heat reflective material. There is no word if the cabin survived.

Bluff Camp

Yesterday, the fire also burned out the upper Santa Cruz drainage below the West Big Pine Cliffs, burned completely over the top of Big Pine Mountain and is now approaching Alamar Saddle from the south. More than likely by this afternoon the fire will be down the Alamar, possibly to the area near Bill Farris Camp.

At Bluff Camp, the fire moved past the old CCC-era admin building there was burning down into Indian Creek. The fire has the potential to burn down Indian Creek and join with fire burning south of it in Buckhorn Canyon, continue east up to Loma Pelona and from there down into the Mono or move up onto the eastern flanks of Big Pine.

Courtesy of Forest Service

Wrap is complete. With luck it worked!

Buckhorn Canyon

By late day yesterday, fire line had almost reached the bottom of Buckhorn Canyon, four miles and several thousand feet elevation drop from where the fire had crossed Buckhorn Road. More than likely the fire has reached Indian Creek by late today. If so, this would indicate the fire line is within 4-5 miles of the Santa Ynez River.

Worsening the situation, the winds are expected to shift tomorrow to a more southerly flow and could accelerate the fire movement towards Santa Barbara.

More tomorrow when it becomes much clearer how each of these situations plays out. There is little good news to report.

Author’s note: Due to the difficulty of providing maps that give a better understanding of the locations, every effort will be made to get them in place by tomorrow.

Story Help (Click-ability)
Double-clicking on any word or phrase in this story will open a reference window with definitions and links to other reference material.

Comments

Discussion Guidelines

Thanks again for a great account! You are correct: maps that show the place names you mention would be great! (It took me a long time to find a map that shows buckhorn road, for example.)

Can you comment on the overall impact of the fire on the wilderness? Fire is good, but is this too much? If we get some decent rains next spring (a big if), will this be a great area for wildflowers?

tve (anonymous profile)
August 6, 2007 at 10:37 p.m. (Suggest removal)

Once again, thank you Ray for your very detailed reporting, and the Independent for providing the platform -- the other local media have truely fallen down on the job. This is a big story that is far from over. As you say, there is nothing at all good about a 20 mile fire front entering the Mono drainage. I hope I am wrong about the nagging feeling that in better times USFS would have had the resources to stop the fire at Zaca Ridge, and again at Mission Pine ridge. Budget slashing has forced LPNF to be penny-wise, but what remains to be seen is how pound-foolish things get.

Outback (anonymous profile)
August 6, 2007 at 11:18 p.m. (Suggest removal)

Another informative update! This is the only media outlet I know of providing this much detail. Kudos for aranging someone as familiar with the backcountry as Ray Ford to do the reporting.

Can't believe this fire has overrun Bluff Camp and is getting so close to the Mono debris dam.

An inexpensive map that shows most of the places mentioned in this report is available from the forest headquarters on Hollister Ave. The map is titled "Los Padres National Forest - Mt. Pinos, Ojai, and Santa Barbara Ranger Districts" and might also be available downtown at Pacific Travellers or SB Outfitters, both on Anapamu.

EastBeach (anonymous profile)
August 6, 2007 at 11:39 p.m. (Suggest removal)

This is a repeat performance of the 2006 DAY FIRE... The Forest Service Managment let a fire burn on in "Wilderness Areas" .. but then the weather changed. .. It should be clear to all that attempting to do a
controlled burn in long term unpredictable weather conditions is a
policy inviting disaster. Now due to a policy that can only be viewed as totally stupid, Santa Barbara can just hope that the horrific North East Winds do not sweap this fire their way. In 2006 we, in the Frazier Park area, spend about 2 weeks not knowing our fates due to this policy.

tallbear (anonymous profile)
August 7, 2007 at 12:19 a.m. (Suggest removal)

Mr. Ford's writing is by far the best on the Zaca fire situation. Perhaps it is because he has been on the ground in many of the places now being burnt. Please continue to report on the fire and keep up the good work.

twbaker (anonymous profile)
August 7, 2007 at 8:29 a.m. (Suggest removal)

Thanks, Ray Ford and Independent, for this very detailed account of the Zaca Fire. Those of us who live in the foothills behind Santa Barbara, really need an account like this and it has not been available elsewhere with this type of detail. PLEASE CONTINUE THESE UPDATES ON THE FIRE!

jangee (anonymous profile)
August 7, 2007 at 10:13 a.m. (Suggest removal)

Someone should be in handcuffs from the Forest Service. The fire was out and it magicly came back to life. We all know that they like to manage and not suppress. This is criminal what has happened to allow the tax payers money to be spent on letting a forest burn for their resource needs. Now California spends thousands if not a million dollars a day for CAL FIRE to sit in Santa Barbara waiting for this thing to come down, if it at all does. You know, maybe CAL FIRE should just put it out. We know they can do that!

catmando (anonymous profile)
August 7, 2007 at 1:29 p.m. (Suggest removal)

"Someone should be in handcuffs from the Forest Service."

oh puhleeeze. Give us a break. Not every problem has a solution that pleases you. The fire is in unburned super-dry country so steep you can't get a bulldozer in there. The guys are doing what they can, but its a big fire and they only have so many men and so much equipment. Trust me, there is no politician or bureaucrat who want the fire to get bigger.

good pix Independent!

Jawfish www.jawfish.net

jawfish (anonymous profile)
August 7, 2007 at 3:28 p.m. (Suggest removal)

Post a comment

Username:
Password: (Forgotten your password?)

Comment:

EVENT CALENDAR

Previous Month | Next Month

Today's Events Best Bets Submit an Event

Local Weather

Currently:
Haze
Temperature:
66.9°
Wind:
12 W

Surf Report
  • Specials
  • InPrint
  • Top Emails
  • Wedding Guide 2009
  • SBIFF 2009
  • Local Heroes 2008
  • Best Of 2008
  • Tea Fire 2008
  • Blue Green Guide 2008
  • 2008 Election Coverage
  • Calendar of Fundraisers
  • Local Bands
  • Kid's Mother's Day Issue
  • Made in Santa Barbara
  • Summer Reading
  • Santa Barbara Reads 2009 Chooses Fahrenheit 451
  • East Beach Water Contamination Mystery Continues
  • El Corazón del Perro
  • The Stone Foxes Return to Rock’s Roots
  • Horseback Riding Helps Local Vets
  1. Cottage, Sansum May Fuse
  2. Pacific Capital Bancorp Refutes Takeover Gossip
  3. Santa Barbara Named One of “Ten Pricey Cities That Pay Off”
  4. Santa Barbara Scrapbooks to Close Its Doors
  5. Official Michael Jackson Party Announced
  6. Jeff Shelton, Santa Barbara’s Architectural Wizard
  • CREATE AN ACCOUNT
  • LOG.IN
  • CONTENTS
  • CLASSIFIEDS
  • ARCHIVE
  • INFO | ADVERTISING | CONTACT US
Google
 
Independent.com Web
Copyright ©2009 Santa Barbara Independent, Inc. Reproduction of material from any Independent.com pages without written permission is strictly prohibited. If you believe an Independent.com user or any material appearing on Independent.com is copyrighted material used without proper permission, please click here.
This is our Privacy Policy.