Whew!
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Mary A. Castillo
Lagunans held their collective breath Wednesday as a wildfire flared
up in Laguna Canyon leaving 82 acres burned.
The fire started at about 12:47 p.m. while a heavy equipment operator
from the county was clearing brush along the east side of Laguna Canyon
Road near Castle Rock Road. The area is in an unincorporated county
jurisdiction.
“We believe that a blade hit a rock and with the right conditions
created a spark,” said Captain Stephen Miller, public information officer
for the Orange County Fire Authority. “He tried to put it out with dirt
but it got out of hand.”
But no one knew those details when they first saw the smoke in the
distance as they were finishing their lunch hour and starting back toward
work or home.
The Laguna Beach Police Department immediately began diverting
irritated drivers away from Laguna Canyon Road. But as word spread
throughout downtown, people began climbing to the top of buildings and
stopping on sidewalks, faces turned east where a smudge of brown smoke
marred a Southern California blue sky.
Outside the Sawdust, Seven Degrees and the Boys and Girls Club,
workers and artists stood watching the direction of the wind and
remembering all too vividly the fire of 1993.
“We just heard an announcement over the PA,” said Carmen Silva, a
photographer who had been working on her booth. “They didn’t suggest we
leave but I’m taking my work out and anyone else’s art I can fit into my
car.”
At Canyon Acres Drive, neighbors stood out on the road, some carrying
small children and bags filled with irreplaceable belongings.
Although she was only four at the time, Amanda Winner remembers the
fear when they were evacuated nine years ago.
“It was scary. I remember getting in the car and the smoke,” she said.
Conversation stopped when the sound of helicopter blades throbbed
overhead. A snorkel trailed behind it as it circled toward the smoke.
Unlike the 1993 fire, aerial attacks on this fire began within the first
10 to 12 minutes of the fire. But that didn’t stop Canyon residents just
west of the fire from turning on sprinklers on rooftops or soaking their
yards with garden hoses.
“The 1993 fire was a fire we thought wouldn’t get out of control,”
said Jennifer Burge. “But it did.” About 100 feet from the command post
at Castle Rock Road where the fire originated, a group of residents with
homes in the area waited anxiously.
“I was having lunch in downtown when my business partner called to
tell me about the fire,” said Phillip Burkhardt, a general contractor
whose business and home were nearby. “They won’t let us into our homes,”
he said.
Alan Turner, whose home stood on Stan Oaks was less patient. “They
suggested we put sprinklers on the roof after the last fire but they
won’t allow you to go home to turn them on,” he said. Fearing that the
wind would send embers over the road, he shook his head angrily.
“They won’t allow me to even help myself,” he added as he rolled a
cigarette and lit it. “And that’s a problem.”
At 2:30 P.M., Captain Miller reported that the fire consumed 40 to 50
acres. Orange County Fire Authority crews attacked the fire from the top
of the ridge and at the bottom near the road. Behind him, slender plumes
of smoke drifted upward, telling of a fire that hadn’t given up the
fight.
“If the wind holds we may contain it at 60 acres,” he said. Although
more than 70 fire fighters were on scene, additional resources were en
route, he said.
However, aerial units were requested immediately. California Division
of Forestry planes, together with helicopters from the Fire Authority,
Orange County Sheriffs Department and the San Bernardino Sheriffs
Department, took turns making passes over the terrain.
Across the road from the command post, three workers from the Laguna
County Water District watched a crew of firemen attack a flare-up high up
above the road.
“We came out here to make sure they have enough water,” said Don
Colucci, spokesperson for the water district. The crew checked that the
small station of thick blue pipes curving up out and back down into the
ground was pushing plenty of up flow to the fire hydrants nearby.
“We’ve got lots of water,” Colucci said. “More water than they’ll be
able to use.”
Engineer Ray Falcon of Fire Authority station 22 in Laguna Hills,
manned the water and fire retardant foam supplies to the hoses that
snaked up the hill.
“My crew took off as soon as we pulled up,” he said. “I haven’t seen
or heard from them since, but I know they’re doing the best job they can
do.”
The crew made an attack at the bottom of the hill to cut the fire off
from the road and businesses like Laguna Gardens Nursery across the way.
Above Falcon, the brush covering the rise was untouched.
Although he was well out of danger, Falcon was pretty clear where he’d
rather be.
“Up there is where all the action is,” he said.
At 3:30 p.m., Miller confirmed that 95% of the fire was contained and
that it had burned 80 acres.
The crews planned to work through night on the hot spots that could
smolder for as long as 24 hours if neglected. Dressed in field coats and
armed with rakes and shovels, the crews lined up on a trail above the
road, lighting backfires to eliminate extra fuel for the fire.
The Fire Authority officially declared the fire 100% contained at 6
a.m., Thursday. However, hand crews planned to work the area until early
afternoon.
The feeling among the residents was one of relief that Wednesday was a
relatively cool day and fire authorities proved to learn quite a few
lessons from the 1993 fires.
“It was very effective fire fighting,” said Charles Quilter, a
resident for 30 years. “They got a hold of it real fast.” But the fire
would serve to heighten everyone’s awareness as Laguna faces a long
summer.
“The Laguna Coast Wilderness park is so dry,” said Mary Fegraus,
executive director of the Laguna Canyon Foundation. “The conditions are
like how it should be at the end of October.”
Although the fire destroyed the primary grazing area for local deer,
she also looked to the positive affects of the fire.
“Coastal Sage habitats respond well to the energy of fire,” she said.
“It releases seeds that have been waiting to sprout sometimes as long as
30 years.”
David Horne, founder of the Greater Laguna Coast Fire Safe Council,
urged residents to volunteer for this summer’s Red Patrol Program to
prevent devastating fires like the one in 1993.
“Our mission is to keep the coastal region fire safe,” he said.
He hopes that with severe drought conditions people will turn out to
help the Laguna Beach Fire Department and the Fire Authority.
Volunteers will simply go out on patrols when the Department of
Forestry declares red flag conditions, which are low humidity and Santa
Ana winds.
Morning traffic flowed down Laguna Canyon Road on Thursday, pausing by
the blackened hill before speeding up to get to offices and summer camps.
Dogs chased each other through the park when fire crews, who had returned
to their stations last night, were ending their shifts.
Proof that Laguna was on its way to normal life but not without the
fear that fire could very well happen again.
“Everyone out here will be the eyes and ears of the fire department,”
said Quilter.
The Red Flag Patrol will hold its training meeting at 9 a.m., June 30
at City Hall Council Chambers. For information, call 494-6220.
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