At the 12:30 pm news conference held today, Zaca Incident Commanders expressed a cautious optimism that they had turned the corner on the southern flank of the fire. Forty days after the fire began, and after a week in which Santa Barbara residents feared the worst, the leading edge of the fire appears to be turning northeast and into the wilderness.
Much of the credit for this is due to the tireless efforts of the hundreds of fire fighters out on the front line doing the hard work. But credit must also go to the long range planning initiated by the National Incident Management Organization (NIMO) from Boise, currently implemented by the two Type 1 Teams brought in last week.
The effort has not been easy. For the past week, using air attack to protect their backs, fire fighters have used direct line construction and burn out operations to build five miles of containment line from the Peachtree area to Little Pine Mountain.
“This has been a tough five miles,” Mark Schmitt, the county representative on the Incident Management Team explained. “At one point, to finish off the last section on the east side of Little Pine Mountain, we needed to move a crew in place where the only way into the area was by rappelling down fixed ropes from helicopters.
Ray Ford
Telephoto view of the last portion of Little Pine Mountain to be contained, where Hot Shots needed to be helicoptered in and lowered by rope to get in to the work area. Note the steepness of the dozer line built down the cliffs.
“It was steep country with lots of bluffs, and the only way the crews could get in was by dropping down from the air. We put a line around 95% of the area yesterday and will finish it up today.”
Having contained this section and widened the route down Camuesa Canyon to Indian Creek, Schmitt was very optimistic the back firing planned for Monday could be put on hold. If this is possible it will reduce the final size of the planned back burns quite a bit.
Schmitt continued, “We’re looking at turning the fire along the Don Victor Jeepway. If we can hold this line and move the fire north we may be able to avoid burning out the Mono and Agua Caliente drainages. We’ll know in the next two or three days if we were successful.
Ray Ford
DC-10 lays down a long strip of retardant fire fighters hope will buy enough time to build containment lines along the fire's edge. This slope threatens to carry the fire down into Pie Canyon.
“We’ll use every opportunity to go direct where we can, one foot in the black, one foot on the road. But we need to cool the fire down -- and air attack will help us accomplish that.”
Just moments before the conference began, Schmitt announced the DC-10 had made its first drop along the Jeepway and they were hopeful the road could be held. “We’re always playing a game of ‘what ifs,’” he said. “Once we started turning the fire we started asking ourselves, what if we can hold this Jeepway? It would avoid having to burn out quite a bit of territory, possibly as much as 60,000 acres.”
“One of the reasons we could take this opportunity,” Bill Molumby, the other Incident Commander for the Live Oak Team added, “is that we had the plans in place and had done the work needed to establish our primary containment. This made us comfortable that we had the fall back lines in place if things didn’t work out.”
One benefit of this turn of events is that the Paradise Evacuation order was lifted late Sunday and residents will be allowed to return home.
Ray Ford
Air attack drops retardant near intersection of Indian and Buckhorn canyons to slow the fire's downstream progress. The upper canyon in view is almost all burned out. Behind this in the Narrows area there was a massive firestorm in progress.
Upper Sisquoc To Be Cordoned Off
Yesterday, the Richardson area commander, Mike Dietrich, received Federal permission to use a dozer in the San Rafael Wilderness down a long ridge near Salisbury Potero. "We're allowed run the dozer 2.1 miles down the Sweetwater Trail, no more than 1 1/2 blades wide," Dietrich explained. From there we're using hand crews to continue the line down to the Sisquoc near the South Fork and from there up to White Ledge Camp.
"Tomorrow we'll begin burning from Santa Barbara Potrero west along the Sierra Madre ridge to Salisbury, lighting the fire in strategic locations that will take the fire up to the ridge in stages. Once we reach the Sweetwater dozer line we'll do the same down it, gradually adding more and more black along our containment lines until they are wide enough that anything burning in the middle can't spot out."
Dietrich expects this will take 3-4 days to accomplish and includes everything in the upper Sisquoc drainage east of the South Fork, including the Condor Sanctuary, an area in excess of 30,000 acres. This isn't something he takes lightly. "We've done everything else we can at this point," he explained. "We just can't let it continue down river."
Once the Sisquoc back firing has been accomplished the plan is to turn east and continue building a black line around the main fire perimeter, which is moving both north and south. "The most difficult section we'll have is the set of switchbacks on Highway 33 north of Pine Mountain," Dietrich added.
“We’ll start there first and work our way along the highway to Rancho Nuevo Canyon and then follow the OHV route in Tinta Canyon northwest past Cuyama Peak to Santa Barbara Canyon and tie up with our earlier burn.
Ray Ford
Massive plumes build in the upper Indian and Alamar drainages. On the right middle side of the picture, the lower plume is burning down into Pie Canyon.
“Once we’ve done that we should know if Live Oak has been successful in keeping the fire west of the Don Victor Jeepway. If so, we’ll burn along the Jeepway out to Potrero Seco and follow the Don Victor from our end and meet them somewhere in the middle.”
“We expect the perimeters to be pretty black for the first half mile or so in, far enough there’s no way for the fire to escape, but once we’ve accomplished that we’ll work to burn the inside areas in a way that keeps the fire cool.”
Even so, Dietrich expects this will include at least 70,000 acres on this side of the fire perimeter, with 70-80% of it burning at some point over the next few months. “We’ll monitor it constantly until it’s all out,” he added.
Ray Ford
The main plume builds to a height of more than 20,000 feet, high enough for ice crystals to form, turning the top into something akin to an ice cap. Soon after, the plume collapsed sending everything back down. Note the Don Victor Jeepway in the bottom middle and diagonally to the right of it flames near what is known as Loma Pelona.
Final Thoughts
After the press conference I traveled up to the Santa Ynez Mountain crest to check out the fire activity. From town I could see an imposing plume and it appeared things were heating up.
My first impression was that the fire was a long ways off. It was refreshing to see this after watching the plume build earlier in the afternoon and feeling like it was right behind us and just over the crest.
A few minutes of watching the fire led me to a second impression: the fire is distinctly moving north and east in a direction that is getting us out of harm’s way. There is just one small section on the south side of Indian Creek that has active burning and it appears not too difficult to contain.
It also seems the fire is building in intensity and moving towards the far perimeters faster than fire fighters might have expected.
As I watched over the next several hours I could see multiple plumes build into one until the column reached a width in the 4-6 mile range that stretched from Indian Canyon north across the east flanks of Big Pine Mountain to the Alamar and across that drainage through a small window known as the pueto suelo. My impression is that the fire has moved past Madulce Peak and is now entrenched in the Santa Barbara Canyon and Don Victor Valley areas.
Ray Ford
DC-10 turns over the Puerto Suelo. Madulce Peak is to the left and just north of the saddle is the location of Maduce Camp. The fire is already well beyond the Puerto Suelo, moving rapidly towards the primary containment lines.
And my final thought was although Incident Commanders hoped to contain the fire along the Don Victor Jeepway it has slopped far enough over into Pie Canyon that they will not be able to hold it to the road. There is some good news in that this edge of the fire is moving into a 10-year-old previous fire area — the Ogilvy — and that it may stall out.
Worst case is that the back firing Bill Molumby hopes to avoid may be needed after all.
Double-clicking on any word or phrase in this story will open a reference window with definitions and links to other reference material.

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Thanks again for this great information! The photos and explanations are excellent.
GoletaResident (anonymous profile)
August 13, 2007 at 5:54 a.m. (Suggest removal)
Why is the team in command not willing to call in the military and the six C130's that are available to us to put this fire out? Is it all political? Is it all about who get's the money for fighting the fire? They say using the C130's is expensive. Yet the price tag is already over 60-million dollars. Wouldn't stopping the fire quickly and releasing the resources be cheaper than continuing to fight the fire and burning the entire backcountry and all the wildlife in it?
CaminoCielo (anonymous profile)
August 13, 2007 at 7:12 a.m. (Suggest removal)
The Sisquoc Condor Santuary aounds like an exclusive SB cimmunity, but if it was they wouldn't be firebombing it.
walker2 (anonymous profile)
August 13, 2007 at 7:31 a.m. (Suggest removal)
Maybe the C130s are putting out fires in Bagdad (or other countries)?
GoletaResident (anonymous profile)
August 13, 2007 at 7:34 a.m. (Suggest removal)
Thank you, Ray!
elaz (anonymous profile)
August 13, 2007 at 8:06 a.m. (Suggest removal)
From InciWeb.org:
Current Situation
Total Personnel 2,676
Size 94,522 acres
Percent Contained 44%
Did the percentage really decrease this much?
GoletaResident (anonymous profile)
August 13, 2007 at 8:37 a.m. (Suggest removal)
Paradise can go home, but still under evacuation warning? Thank you hotshots for holding that line!
robert (Robert LeBlanc)
August 13, 2007 at 9:53 a.m. (Suggest removal)
Great info and explanation, as usual, Ray. Thanks so much. We might be off the hook down here, but I can't stop thinking about the wildlife. And the watershed.
mtndriver (anonymous profile)
August 13, 2007 at 10:15 a.m. (Suggest removal)
From: /ww.sbcfire.com/
"Containment is currently listed at 44%. This is due to a change in the method used. The percent contained now reflects the control strategy for the entire fire, including the direct fire lines that have been completed and indirect fire lines that are in place and being improved. The fire has not jumped any containment lines and is still within the control objectives set by the Incident Commanders."
GoletaResident (anonymous profile)
August 13, 2007 at 11:20 a.m. (Suggest removal)
Thanks for explanation of the worrying smoke I saw yesterday!
Bingo (anonymous profile)
August 13, 2007 at 1:20 p.m. (Suggest removal)
Well looks like they have finally decided to get honest about how contained the fire is. That 70% they were listing has been wrong for a while. I mean just look at the open fire line! http://maps.google.com/maps/ms?ie=UTF8&a...
To make things worse....it's going to be like the perfect storm for the next 3 days. There is a Red Flag warning for extreme temperatures and north-easterly winds: http://forecast.weather.gov/wwamap/wwatx...
http://www.wrh.noaa.gov/lox/
This week is going to be interesting to say the least.
kcox920 (anonymous profile)
August 13, 2007 at 1:27 p.m. (Suggest removal)
it's a disgrace that it's progressed this far. they should have been fighting it from the air a long time ago. with this and the fire from pine mountain to the edges of ojai last fall that means the santa barbara and ventura county backcountry has been burnt almost completely.
it is now very visible from ventura. i'd post a pic i took a couple of hours ago from the harbor if there was capacity for it.
i also just got off the phone to barbara boxer's los angeles office to complain.
shaunna (anonymous profile)
August 13, 2007 at 2:50 p.m. (Suggest removal)
Thank you, Ray! Best coverage of any fire I've ever seen and I've been here for quite a while --- and this is the worst of the fires, too.
Can you get some info on the wildlife, especially the endangered, the condors, for instance? It's a disgrace they're going to backburn in the condor sanctuary - if that's what they're going to do. It looks from what you wrote that's what they will do:
"...
Dietrich expects this will take 3-4 days to accomplish and includes everything in the upper Sisquoc drainage east of the South Fork, including the Condor Sanctuary, an area in excess of 30,000 acres. This isn't something he takes lightly."
...
citti (anonymous profile)
August 13, 2007 at 9:31 p.m. (Suggest removal)
I am thankful for the thorough coverage of this great trajedy. While I too greatly appreciate the work of firefighters to keep this incredible fire away from us, I will not separate myself from the animals and trees. There is a part of my soul that is dying with them. The loss of life is overwhelming (to me).
I have walked thru many of these areas (that have burned or will burn) and experienced a deep, serene, "wild" peace. These wild places and their inhabitants are priceless treasures turned into smoke and ash!
Let us at the very least, aknowledge this great loss of life and face the reality that our forest fire fighting technology needs to be updated.
panzumo (anonymous profile)
August 13, 2007 at 10:22 p.m. (Suggest removal)
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