Refugio
Fire
September 6-15, 1955
"The longer an area
remains unburned, the greater becomes its potentiality for fires
of uncontrollable fury. The reason is simple. In our very dry
climate, the accumulation of combustible debris becomes thicker
with each passing year and as the fuel accumulates, the difficulty
of quenching a fire also mounts. In other words, sooner or later,
flames will spread uncontrollably through the chaparral, and
worse yet, the longer between the burns the hotter the fire and
the more difficult to control.
Furthermore, by laws of chance, sooner or
later one of these fires will break out during Santana weather when
temperatures are high, relative humidity is low and the air is moving
anywhere from a few miles an hour to 40-plus miles an hour. Under
these conditions, a wildfire grows so monstrous in its intensity,
and so great in its coverage, that the combined efforts of Forestry
Services, State, County and other local personnel and equipment are
completely overwhelmed. A few houses may be saved by concentrating
all nearby equipment in a few places but elsewhere the fire burns
without hindrance."
R. B. Cowles
Professor of Biological Science, UCSB |
SANTA BARBARA WILDFIRES
Prologue
Fire
on the Hills
Refugio
Fire—1955
Coyoto
Fire—1964
Wellman
Fire—1966
Romero
Fire—1971
Sycamore
Fire—1977
Eagle
Fire—1979
Wheeler
Fire—1985
Painted
Cave Fire—1990

|
IT IS A THIRSTY LAND.
Not because of the water needed by the chaparral--it has long
ago adapted its needs to that which is available. It is the city
which is parched for water.
In 1900, with a population of barely 6,000, Santa
Barbara experiences its first water crisis. The 1890s have been bone
dry. Still, the city grows in size. The Southern Pacific Railroad
has been completed from Los Angeles in 1891; in 1902 it will be connected
through to San Francisco.
Transportation, which has always been a main factor
inhibiting Santa Barbara's growth, no longer is. As the new century
dawns the key, as it still is today, is now water. In response to
the brewing crisis the City Council authorizes J. B. Lippincott,
who works for the U.S. Geologic Survey, to investigate new sources
of water. He recommends construction of a water tunnel from Mission
Canyon through the Santa Ynez Mountains to the Santa Ynez River near
what is known as the Gibraltar Narrows.
The initial work on the tunnel is begun in 1904
but it is not completed until 1912 due to serious difficulties which
include sulphur gas, cave-ins, and quicksand. In 1915 a $590,000
bond is issued and the construction of Gibraltar Dam is authorized
and completed in 1921.
Santa Barbara has tied its future to local water
to be supplied from the mountain wall, and from a plant cover whose
overwhelming necessity is wildfire.
Ironically, the National Forest system is created
in 1891, not to protect the majestic Sierras, filled with forests
of Jeffrey and Yellow pines, but the brush-covered San Bernardino
Mountains behind Los Angeles. The Forest Reserve Act is obscure and
is attached as a rider to a more important bill but it serves its
purpose well, authorizing the President to set aside land by executive
order to protect water flow. All Southern California is feeling the
pinch of water.
In 1898 the first local tract, the Pine Mountain-Zaca
Lake Forest Reserve, is set aside by President McKinley, and in 1899
the Santa Ynez Forest Reserve is added. In 1908 they are consolidated
to become the Santa Barbara National Forest. The main job of this
newly-created agency is to protect the Santa Ynez watershed from
fire, which at the time is considered anathema.
A war on fire is declared.
It is not understood at the time, but the Forest
and the Forest Service, like the tectonic plates beneath them, are
on a collision course.
DESPITE THIS DECLARATION, surprisingly,
the decade of the 1920s proves to be the most costly in the history
of California up to this time. In the Los Padres National Forest
alone 495,845 acres burn, an amount equal to one-third of the southern
portion of the forest.
On September 7, 1932 a butane tank explodes, starting
a fire in the Ojai area that burns 219,255 acres. Its west flank
escapes into the upper Santa Ynez drainage decimating a large portion
of the watershed above Gibraltar Dam. The Ghost of Matilija haunts
those who seek to find the key which will unlock the door of success
to fire prevention.
The Forest Service does not seem to be doing its
job.
************************
On April 1, 1929 the Los Padres National Forest receives
its seventh forest supervisor, Stephen Nash-Boulden. Though it
is April Fool's, Nash-Boulden is no trick, and in the 17 years
he is in charge of the forest it is thoroughly modernized. Though
he has no formal college education he is a no-nonsense ranger who
expects the most from his employees.
The key to fighting fires, he believes, is attack
time, the amount of time between a fire's starting and personnel
arriving on the scene to fight it. In the 1920s this response time
is a slow 3.5 hours. Nash-Boulden is determined to change this.
Lookout towers are constructed along each of the
main ranges to make spotting fires easier. On the Santa Ynez Mountains
they are located at La Cumbre and Santa Ynez Peaks; in the San Rafaels
on West Big Pine and Figueroa Mountains. Nash-Boulden sees that radio
telephones are installed in each of them.
Bulldozers, and the first mountain fire truck
are added and in the 1930s with an influx of manpower provided by
the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) the Forest Supervisor oversees
construction of a network of roads throughout the back country mountains.
In 1934 he introduces the 10 am Policy.
"Fire suppression will be fast, energetic,
thorough, and conducted with a high degree of regard for personal
safety....
"When the first attack fails...organize and
activate sufficient strength to control every fire within the first
work period;
the attack each succeeding day will be planned and executed to obtain
control before 10 o'clock the next morning."
Nash-Boulden, undaunted by sportsmen who are sure
to be critical, closes the Gibraltar watershed to the public during
months of extreme fire danger except by permit in 1934 and during
World War II closes the forest to public use entirely.
His efforts are successful. Between 1916 and 1933,
there are 40 fires in the Gibraltar watershed which burn a total
of 155,712 acres. From 1933 to the end of his tenure there are no
more. The key, it appears, has been found, the door unlocked.
Dues must be paid, however. A price has been extracted
for that success. Since the fires of the 1920s brush on the mountain
wall has been accumulating. It is now senescent.
THE WEATHER during the previous
week had been extreme. Temperatures as high as 110 degrees had been
registered with humidity as low as 6 per cent. Moisture in the chaparral
surrounding La Chirpa Ranch near Refugio Pass, critical to the ease
with which the vegetation would ignite, had been driven to lows of
less than 5 per cent.
This trend had started on August 28th, the cumulative
effect of which had been to make fire conditions in the Santa Ynez
Mountains the worst of the decade.
Vegetation surrounding the ranch had been inspected
by Forest Service personnel in June and it was noted that, other
than the minor cleanup of scattered leaves, a good job had been done
of preparing for the summer fire season. Unfortunately, not as much
care had been taken with the buildings surrounding the ranch.
Though cooler at midnight, an hour before the
fire started, the temperature still remained at 80 degrees. Winds
gusted from 15-20 miles per hour. All that was needed was a spark.
The small building in which the fire began was
small, housing a generator which provided power for the ranch. Inside
were other assorted supplies and an open-topped gasoline tank from
which fumes were escaping. An improvised set of wires arced, this
creating the spark which ignited the gas at 1 am, early in the morning
on Tuesday, September 6, 1955.
At first the ranch caretaker attempts to put the
fire out but in his excitement the efforts are ineffective. At 1:06
am, he runs to the main ranch and calls long distance to the phone
operator who forwards his call to the Santa Barbara County Fire Department,
which receives it at 1:14 am. Immediately units are dispatched from
the Goleta and Jonata stations along with one of its commanders,
Chief Wadleigh.
Driving rapidly down Highway 101 when Wadleigh
first comes into view of the fire he realizes it is inside forest
boundaries and radios the Cachuma fire station to get Forest Service
personnel rolling. The Santa Ynez Lookout is notified by the station,
which in turn notifies the Los Prietos Ranger Station that a major
fire has broken out near the summit of Refugio Pass, but because
of the delay in notification, valuable minutes are lost.
At 1:30 am, more than a half hour after the fire's
start Santa Barbara Ranger District resources are on the way from
Los Prietos, including all available pumpers, crews and patrolmen,
along with two dozers. The first of the Forest Service forces reach
the ranch at 1:44 am, just 14 minutes later, but by then the blaze
has already spread to approximately 20 acres in size and is being
driven by a 15 mph wind.
The Forest Service is hampered not only by the
steep terrain, heavy brush and the critical weather pattern but the
fact that key personnel are out of county on several other major
fires. In the early morning hours, as the fire spreads rapidly, there
is a clear realization that gaining control of this fire will be
tough.
Though no one yet realizes it, the Refugio Fire,
as it will soon be called, will burn for 10 days, consume more than
77,000 acres of vegetation, scar the entire length of the Santa Ynez
Mountains from Refugio to San Marcos Pass, and call for a drastic
reorientation of fire policy.
Rugged and remote, despite its being near the
coast, the western portion of the Santa Ynez Mountains contains more
wild country than many legally-defined wildernesses. For twenty miles
these mountains remain unbroken by roads, and the numerous ranches
and small farms to be found along the coast from Goleta to Gaviota
form a band of private property that makes access even by foot extremely
difficult. Isolated from human intrusion they form a visual backdrop
that is seen daily, though rarely-if-ever have they attracted much
attention before.
The sun has beaten down on the chaparral-covered
slopes for many days now, and despite how well they are adapted to
such conditions, even the hardiest of these plants are being scorched.
From above the canopy, though dull in color, seems
green and surprisingly alive. It is what is below, what cannot be
seen through casual observation, however, that is of critical importance.
Meshed and tangled, the plant cover near Refugio
Pass is composed of thick, interlocking branches, mostly dead material,
that clog the understory and make passage through it almost impossible.
The shrubbery is not more than ten-to-fifteen feet in height but
tons of fuel are contained in it.
************************
The chamise, perfectly adapted to this environment,
catches fire first; its small needle-like leaves are filled with
creosote. The leaves not only resist evapo-transpiration and are
well adapted to fire, but when dropped onto the ground by the plant
they react with the soil to form a chemical barrier called allelopathy,
that keeps other chaparral plants from invading their territory and
allow them to grow together in large communities.
Thick clouds of black oily smoke begin to roll
into the sky from the hundreds of acres of chamise. The heat radiates
outward, gradually increasing in temperature until the effect is
like that of opening a thousand oven doors at once. The heat pours
out, searing the brush.
At first the wildfire moves slowly, but as the
wind directs its path the front begins to advance more quickly. The
intense heat drives off the remaining moisture in the tiny leaves
and small diameter branches of the ceanothus, which are next to burn,
converting them to flammable gases which burst into flame as the
front ignites it.
Next the manzanita, their beautiful shiny smooth
bark fiery-red, burst into flame. As the front passes the heat is
not so easily conducted into their thicker cores. The leathery green
leaves and smaller outer branches ignite, incinerated into a fine
powdery-white ash, but the main branches only char. The bushes that
remain behind look like glowing orange-and-black fingers that stick
out of the ground.
In their glowing state they are beautiful, but
their destructive potential remains. The front has passed through
this area so quickly that not all of the brush has been burned. The
glowing embers from these charred fingers soon scatter in the wind,
and what has not yet burned soon will.
The heat, now approaching 1,000 degrees, begins
to generate its own wind currents; as the hot air rises cooler air
is drawn in, which is then in turn superheated and funnelled along
the contours of the steep topography where the radiating heat and
superheated winds cause temperatures to rise to three-to-four times
for short periods of time.
In brush that hasn't known fire in more than 50
years, as the wind orchestrates the front's path, pushing it towards
Santa Ynez Peak which is 3 miles to the east, the fuel burns readily
and intensely, concentrating the radiating heat along steep, almost
inaccessible upper headwalls.
************************
To this point in time there has been but one policy
for dealing with fire; suppress every one with the utmost vigor.
Fire is the enemy; one which must be dealt with severely and swiftly.
It is not yet understood that the chaparral needs
fire to remain healthy as surely as the animals which inhabit it
need food and water. Over millions of years an equilibrium has been
reached; in a mediterranean climate such as ours fire has become
the most efficient means through which the chaparral can be decomposed.
The cycle in this brush is perhaps 25-30 years
in length, meaning that the Refugio chaparral is overripe. This chaparral
has matured prior to the turn of the century; since the early 1900s
it has been producing yearly increments of dead material and over
time the ratio of dead fuel to live plant material has increased
dramatically. As the fire burns toward it as much as 50 per cent
of the standing mass of the chaparral is dead, and thick beds of
dry material litters the ground. Thus prepared, it awaits the flames.
The relationship is both curious and ambivalent.
Fire is among man's oldest and best used friends; but as man has
expanded the boundaries of his suburban homes and become more dependent
on the back country for needed resources, in its most primitive and
uncontrolled state--wildfire--it has also become terrifying and terribly
destructive.
It seems a Catch-22 situation.
To protect vital resources the threat of wildfire
must be eliminated; to do so in chaparral country almost seems to
guarantee that they will occur. Given an appropriate mixture of fuel,
heat, and wind--which occurs regularly in chaparral ecosystems--when
they do occur they become large, uncontrollable, and expensive.
But on the morning of the 6th fire fighters are
not asking themselves philosophical questions; these will come later.
The immediate efforts are to contain the fire to the east, or Santa
Barbara, side of Refugio Road and the south, or ocean, side of Camino
Cielo. By 8 am the fire has not only spread east but also rapidly
down into Refugio Canyon, threatening guests at the Circle Bar B
Guest Ranch and other nearby structures, having consumed more than
1200 acres of chaparral.
Fire fighting forces concentrate just above
the ranch and, along with heavy use of the pumpers, are able to stop
it just short of the main buildings, though not before destroying
two outlying guest cottages. One of these, "The Hideaway," is occupied
by Carl Wiggins and his wife, newlyweds, married only Saturday. They
are forced to flee in the face of the advancing flames.
At a nearby ranch, the Dal Pozzo family has slept
peacefully until just before dawn when the deep-toned bark of Gustav,
their Great Dane awakens them to the danger. At first the threat
seems far away but as the morning hours pass the fire nears. Shortly
after noon the danger, which had heretofore seemed close though not
too fearful, becomes very real.
"You can hear the roar of the fire distinctly," reports
Frank Clarvoe, News-Press associate editor, who is on the scene. "From
the window of the Dal Pozzo home, I have a visual range of 180 degrees.
All the way around this half circle, flames are moving up and down
the slopes and through the dry grass, brush and scrub oak in an unbroken
line.
"There is a rain of ash. There are several
layers of deep brown smoke, and the whole sky is cut off. The cloud
of smoke
driving out over the ocean makes the sea appear from here to be almost
brown in color.
"The Edison Co. has cut off its lines up the
canyon.
"The women around the ranch here are using
hoses to dampen things down. The fire is on the ridge just above
them....
"The smoke is mushrooming up in varying colors,
and the sunlight is reduced to an amber glow. The whole side of the
mountains is an eerie kaleidoscope of colors."
The fire continues inexorably down the mountain,
at one point encircling the house in flame, but because the women
have dampened the buildings and surrounding vegetation with water,
the ranch is saved.
************************
As the fire races down slope it passes the Circle
Bar B Ranch, where at noon, the guests lounge about in the yard,
thinking the fire no longer threatens them. But in the lower foothills
the front surges westward as the wind gusts, cutting off Refugio
Road from beneath them, and for a few minutes there is panic, their
only possible route of escape over Refugio Pass where the charred
remains are still aflame.. But quickly the danger passes.
At 6 pm the fire leaps across Refugio Road and
begins to eat up hillsides filled with grass and coastal sage on
the west side of the road. The sage explodes into flame, crackling,
the terpines in the aromatic leaves burning almost as explosively
as gasoline. The front has split, now spreading outward both to the
east and west, moving relentlessly across the foothills in either
direction.
"The sun, when one could see it was a hot, deep
red disc," Clarvoe continues as he describes the rapidly expanding
pace of the fire.
"The wind was hot, and seemed to blow from
many directions at once, bringing with it the heat of the fire as
if an
oven had been opened. The wind was laden with ash, and sometimes
it lifted embers from the front of the advancing flame line, hurled
them thousands of feet to start new fires.
"Along the ground the wind whipped up dirt
and sand, and soon one was covered with sweat and ash and dirt."
"And the heat--always the heat, from the seared
and searing patches of scrub oak and dried grass.
"Such was the fire in all its sinister majesty,
its terrible beauty."
By 7 pm on the western flank high winds in Tajiguas
Canyon, funnelled seaward from smaller canyons on either side send
searing jets of flames clear across the highway. Semi-trucks, many
of them loaded with perishables destined for markets in Santa Barbara,
line the now deserted four-lane road. The Highway Patrol has halted
all eastbound traffic. Nor is there northbound traffic, save for
a caravan of vacationers requesting evacuation from Refugio State
Beach who are escorted through the choking smoke.
On the deserted highway two cars emerge from the
chaos, slowly herding 15 head of cattle. A wall of flame spooks the
cattle and for a frightening moment they jam themselves against a
barbed wire fence on the opposite side of the road trying to escape
the fiery wall. Two ranchers emerge from a group of spectators who
are watching the fire advance towards them. The men climb a ridge
to where the cattle are huddled and cut the wire. The crowd cheers.
Thousands of other animals will not be so lucky.
By 7:45 pm the fire has surged another several
miles to a ridgeline overlooking Arroyo Hondo Canyon. At this point
things look extremely grim on this edge of the fire, now less than
5 miles from Gaviota and still moving.
The main worry, however, is on the eastern front
which is pressing inexorably towards Goleta. Fortunately out-of-town
Forest Service personnel begin to arrive on the scene, one of them
Nolan O'Neal, fire control officer for the Los Padres, who immediately
orders the establishment of fire camps at Refugio Pass, San Marcos
summit, and the Serra Ranch in the foothills above Fairview Avenue
in Goleta.
"The fire remains very critical," he announces, "with
no change in weather predicted for the next two days." Hoping to
calm the growing fears he adds "that every effort is being made to
check the fire, with major emphasis on the east end of the fire" and
that "every possible assistance is being given to adjacent ranch
property owners."
Thus far the fire has followed an extremely frustrating
pattern for fire fighters. Racing eastward toward Santa Barbara it
has stayed along the higher mountainsides and above the roads which
serve ranches and farms along the coastal plain where it is extremely
difficult to fight, and then, after having outraced the efforts of
those fighting it, it has burned in multiple heads down into the
canyons where these ranches and farms are situated, diverting precious
fire personnel to the protection of these structures.
************************
To combat the wall of flame that is burning across
the upper slopes, on the afternoon of the 6th backfires are set along
the crest of the Santa Ynez Mountains from Refugio Pass to Santa
Ynez Peak in a massive attempt to keep the fire on the south side
of the mountains.
At the same time, in an attempt to outflank it
on the east, dozer crews are quickly trucked from Highway 154 across
West Camino Cielo to the head of Tecolote Canyon to open up a line
from the top of the mountains down to Highway 101 from which a stand
can be made. Additional cats work their way up the steep ridgeline
toward Condor Point to join this line.
High temperatures and low humidity add to the
difficulty of fighting the Refugio Fire. At midday the temperature
is 98 degrees and though it has lowered to 84 degrees by 6pm, sundowner
conditions cause it to soar again to 88 degrees by 9 pm.
The line being cleared by the dozers has been
started five miles in advance of the fire, enough of a buffer for
fire fighters to dig in and stop most fires but this one surges,
running eastward at the speed of a fleeing deer, allowing it to breech
the dozer line easily. During the remainder of the night the fire
steadily advances across Tecolote and Winchester Canyons.
"From up above at 2 pm the force of the fire was
increased with the rising gale," the News-Press reports. "The howl
of the wind and the deep roar of the flames, like a speeding freight
train combined in terrible symphony. A county fireman high above
abandoned his backfiring torch and moved down ahead of the flames,
helpless to check them....
"The ground came alive. Brown rabbits and deeper-browned
field rats ran zig-zag courses to escape the terror....Up above the
canyon across the road from the house, a big owl, light gray in the
glow of the flames, flew leisurely--toward the fire--concerned, perhaps,
about her nest."
The vegetation is being eaten up at a ferocious
pace. For as much as 10 miles along Highway 101 the land on both
sides is aflame. Thousands of railroad ties catch fire and the thick,
oily smoke pours upward and over the ocean.
By 8 pm the evening of the 6th 22,000 acres have
been scorched; 24 hours later that total has risen to 40,000 acres.
In less than 30 hours the fire has blackened the entire coastal side
of the Santa Ynez Mountains from Gaviota to Glen Annie Canyon, a
distance of almost 25 miles.
It has been remarkably fortunate that few structures
have been lost; this is due primarily to the fact that the fire has
burned land that is remote and little inhabited. But dawn approaches
on the 7th the Refugio Fire is now on the edge of civilization.
For the first time in what is normally a quiet
tourist town for most Santa Barbarans, the raw power of the fire
menaces them directly.
Early in the morning of the 7th a second dozer
line is cut down a ridge line between San Pedro and San Jose Creeks
and is completed by mid-morning. Thus far the fire has made less
headway than yesterday or the previous night and has entered a period
of lull.
Three hundred weary men hope the period is not
temporary. They are joined by 400 fresh troops, raising hopes further,
with 200 more on the way, including trained fire fighters from Colorado
and New Mexico.
But just as the fuel break is being widened enough
to backfire, the winds kick up and the fire, which has lain down
most of the morning, begins an eastward run which crosses the dozer
line near the base of the mountains.
The Santa Ynez Mountains have become a war zone.
Steadily the flaming enemy advances and the troops fall back, unable
to gain enough of a foothold to make a stand. They retreat once more,
this time to Old San Marcos Pass Road.
This is a line they cannot afford to lose.
************************
"What we need is a direct pipeline to the weatherman," fire
officer Nolan O'Neal laments, after losing the second dozer line
between San Pedro and San Jose Creeks. "He is more important than
all of us put together." But the weatherman does not seem to be listening.
News that the fire has also surged up and over
the mountain crest near Santa Ynez Peak worsens the situation. Thus
far the fire has blackened the entire front side of the range west
of Highway 154 and now the back side of the Santa Ynez Mountains
is in danger of being lost.
The slopover is picked up on the western edge
of the breakthrough near Tequepis Canyon by crews manned from an
old CCC camp near Refugio Pass. On the eastern flank the fire begins
a run towards Highway 154 in the vicinity of Cold Springs Tavern.
Quickly forces are massed to construct lines down the north slope
to cut this flank off.
Near Gaviota, also the morning of the 7th, the
news is better. Dozer crews clear the crest from Refugio Pass to
above Arroyo Hondo hoping to get a handle there before the lull ends.
Frantically the ridge is backfired. The intentionally set fire moves
slowly coastward to meet the advancing wildfire, and for the moment
these crews are able to hold their ground, and keep the front from
moving north over the Santa Ynez Mountains.
The wide expanse of San Jose Canyon is all that
separates the fire from Old San Marcos Pass Road now.
Earlier, with hand crews starting from the bottom
of San Jose Canyon, and dozers blading a wide path from West Camino
Cielo along the ridgeline just west of the Trout Club, a line had
been tied together by midday on the 8th but like the other lines
it is lost, too, when afternoon winds again cause the fire to surge.
For a mile's distance it roars through heavy brush
in less than 15 minutes fanning out and throwing spot fires ahead
of itself. Catching fire personnel by surprise the fire not only
jumps Old San Marcos Pass Road into Maria Ygnacio Canyon, but runs
over the crest of West Camino Cielo near the Winchester Gun Club
and down into the upper watersheds of Bear and Hot Springs Canyon,
creating a second front on the north slopes of the Santa Ynez Mountains.
At this point a strategic decision is made to
abandon the Gaviota line; all forces are needed on the eastern edge
of the fire where residences at the San Marcos Trout Club are in
danger. Only a handful of County fireman under the leadership of
Chief Wadleigh are left behind to protect structures in that area.
The fire burns unchecked on the hills.
************************
Forces mass on Highway 154, the greatest concentration
of manpower since the fire has begun. Fifteen pumpers arrive from
Los Angeles and rush to the Pass where they form a line from the
summit down to a point near the Trout Club.
There are 1,274 fire fighters involved in the
action now, along with 500 Marines with full equipment enabling them
to maintain themselves as a separate unit, more than 40 pumpers and
17 bull dozers, and 2 helicopters which are coordinating the operation
from the air.
By this time the fire has burned more than 68,000
acres in just slightly under 2 1/2 days and covers a 65-mile perimeter.
Throughout the night the fate of the Trout Club
residences hangs in the balance. The situation is tenuous. Erratic
winds cause the fire to shift quickly and at several points men and
equipment are evacuated for fear that they would be trapped.
"I'd rather be back in Prescott, this is a tough
one," an expert who'd been flown in from Prescott National Forest
exclaims as he views the situation.
A hundred yards below the last Trout Club building
twenty-seven Indians mass in an area where it is impossible to backfire.
They have been used by the Forest Service since 1950.
The Indians, from eight different tribes, have
been flown in from Albuquerque have, arriving on the scene of the
fire early in the morning. They have been greeted warmly. "Here come
the hard hats!" the other fire fighters shout, knowing they now have
an ally on their side they can count on.
The Mescalero Apache can be identified by their
shiny red helmets. Others have silver ones labelling them as Zuni,
Zia, or Taos Indians. The hard hats worn by the Indian fire fighters
are greatly prized by them and are decorated so that anyone knowing
the crew's insignia can tell where they are from. Jemez Pueblo Indians
sport an eagle with outstretched claws; the Cochiti's symbol is the
green fir tree; and the Zia sun marks theirs.
Used to the semi-arid conditions of the Southwest
and accustomed to traveling in rough country, they know how to take
care of themselves in the extreme heat. Working without water or
backfires they fight hand-to-hand, using only shovels and other fire
tools for weapons.
They are traditionally farmers, growing corn,
beans and squash as well as raising cattle and sheep on their reservations
when they are not fighting fires. In their pueblos or reservations
they are organized under a clan form of government which lends itself
to working as a team rather than as unorganized individuals.
In between the long 12-to-14 hour days of fighting
fire the Indians rest, eat, play their simple Indian games, and sing
the old songs and chants that were ancient when the first white man
arrived in the Southwest.
Now the Indians ready themselves for the flames,
which are licking their way up San Jose Canyon, here now to help
the white man fight what they call the terrible red wolf.
They are paid well on the fire lines--$1.75 an
hour--and they fight fiercely.
On Old San Marcos Pass, just below the first switchback
another crew of Forest Service men build a hand line down towards
the Indians, hoping to isolate the Trout Club from the blaze, which
is roaring in the canyon just below them.
They are successful in protecting the houses.
"By gosh," Rudolfo Lopez, a Zuni, says shyly afterward, "the
fire was pretty close.
"But we stopped it only a few hundred yards from
the houses," he adds proudly.
Residents of the Trout Club later tell a reporter "there
was a pumper on every corner or hilltop and an Indian behind every
unburned bush; we were never so well guarded in all our lives."
Shortly afterwards the slopover in Maria Ygnacio
Canyon is picked up. For the first time it appears that the eastern
flank of the Refugio Fire is under control.
"I have often wondered what it would be like to
be alone in the world," Bill Hilton thought as he returned to his
Trout Club residence. "Last night I discovered that being alone is
something to be avoided. Last night I moved my family back into the
San Marcos Trout Club and we spent the night there.
"To be sure, we were not alone. But when we
looked out our windows we could not see the usual lights from neighbors'
houses nor hear the usual chatter of children and barking of dogs.
"From our window we could still see flames
and embers on the hillsides across San Jose Creek from the Trout
Club.
"In the lulls between making up beds for the
children and cleaning the ashes and dust from inside the house, we
could hear
rocks, loosened by the fire, rumble down the hillside across the
canyon.
"Then late in the evening, after all the lights
had been turned out, the coyotes and foxes, evacuees themselves from
the fire-blackened area, set up a howling symphony unlike anything
heard in the Trout Club before."
************************
Stubbornly, the Refugio Fire lasts 6 more days,
though no longer threatening the front country.
The Gaviota front is contained by construction
of a fuel break six-to-seven blades wide cut from the Gaviota Tunnel
to the top of the Nojoqui grade, down in back of Nojoqui Park, and
through grassland and oak forests to a point behind Alisal Ranch
where it is tied into a line established from Refugio Pass.
On the north side of the Santa Ynez Mountains
numerous lines are cut across its flanks from the crest down to Highway
154, dividing the numerous slopovers into smaller portions that favor
firefighters.
On the 13th the fire makes one last determined
effort to break through fire lines. Fresh breezes fan flames that
leap across Highway 154 near Rosario Park, which has been evacuated,
and crosses the Santa Ynez River near Paradise Road and heads towards
the San Rafael Mountains. But this is grassland and is more easily
controlled than that in the chaparral.
Flames burn on three sides of the Paradise Store
but it, too, is saved. The breeze lays down and the weather now favors
firefighters rather than the fire . Nolan O'Neal has gotten his wish--the
pipeline to the weatherman has been established.
On the 15th, at 3 pm, ten days after it has begun,
the Los Padres Forest Service announces that the Refugio Fire has
been contained.
ON THE 19TH, at the summit of San Marcos Pass,
in the sliver of a new moon glimmering overhead, a celebration is
held. Amidst the chants and drumbeats of dancing Indians and the
happy smiles and shouts of nearby mountain residents, the eight tribes
of Indians who have fought so bravely are staging their traditional "Rain
Dance." It is time to celebrate; this is the form of relaxation they
display when a blaze they are fighting is brought under control.
The fire is over.
NOT EVERYONE is happy.
"Do you suppose this fire will change the official
Forest Service attitude on controlled burning," one man shouts afterward.
'Look here, if we in Santa Barbara allowed
our weeds and old papers and other flammable trash to accumulate
year
after year, all around the house and the yard and the garage--if
we were foolish enough to do that we'd have a helluva blaze on our
hands once things did catch fire."
Many conservationists grumble. Ranchers on both
sides of the mountains whose lands have been threatened or destroyed
by the fire demand action.
The Forest Service finds itself in a difficult
situation. The brush in most of the front and back country is now
too clogged with dead material to consider the use of controlled
burns anywhere save what has burned in the fire. Fuelbreaks which
might break up the chaparral into more manageable blocks are almost
non-existent. The cost of fire suppression is rising drastically.
And the people are angry.
For more than 50 years they have demanded protection
from fire; now they demand, equally insistently, that fire be returned
to the landscape. |
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