From my perch atop the Tepusquet ridge not too far from the Colson Canyon Quarry I could see why La Brea Fire is so difficult to fight. In spite of the fact that the flames had pushed out of the San Rafael Wilderness and toward forest roads and dozer lines in La Brea Canyon, the fire swarmed over every hill and canyon, eating up the mountains like a swarm of army ants.
By noon, the fire had breached the ridgetop near Pine Canyon on the northwest side of the fire, burning down into the upper parts of the canyon, chewing up an additional thousand acres, and forcing the Sheriff’s Department to initiate a mandatory evacuation of the Tepusquet Canyon area.
Directly below me is Bear Canyon, a tributary of La Brea Canyon. While the big bombers paint the hillsides near me with red, gooey fire retardant in preparation for a backfire later that night, I spot a few helicopters heading down canyon, their task of holding off the advancing flames almost impossible.
Ray Ford
When wind and topography align, the flames push rapidly uphill creating huge plumes and scattering coals for up to a half mile.
The pattern is an interesting one. As the wind blows in a southeast direction, the fire continues to advance against it, something that you wouldn’t think possible. Yet the fire’s leading edge has moved at least two miles in our direction today, despite the head wind, and in some areas twice as far.
One reason for this is the sneaky and persistent way the fire snakes through the maze of small canyons and side drainages, slowly moving downhill into the wind, often diagonally, almost like a sailboat tacking at an angle cross the wind’s path. Once the fire establishes itself down in the recesses formed by the canyons and draws - protected somewhat from the wind that is whistling overhead - the fire will flare up, move rapidly uphill, and then sail diagonally over toward the next set of hills.
I make my way back down Colson Canyon to Tepusquet and then north to Highway 166 and head up Pine Canyon Road to survey the effects from earlier in the day’s slop over into the canyon. In the lower canyon the Hot Shot, engine, and CDF crews are beginning preparations for dinner, exhausted from holding off the fire down here in Pine Canyon. Not too far past their resting spots, just past the turnoff to Brookshire Camp, I enter the burned area.
The whole upper part of Pine Canyon has been burned out and the hillsides are still smoldering. Pockets of fire are still attacking small stands of chaparral that have gotten left behind when the front blew through, and high on the ridge another huge cumulus cloud is building.
At the crest of Pine Canyon I’m confronted with a landscape almost totally devoid of vegetation. Just five days ago I’d stood with firefighters at Miranda Pine Mountain watching the fire make a run toward the Sierra Madres, well to the east. Today, four days later, the fire has not only moved back west and past Miranda Pine but has pretty much blown through all of La Brea Canyon and is on its way toward the Sisquoc.
By Ray Ford
Fire crossed the ridge above and roared through Pine Canyon just hours ago. The cumulous clouds above are evidence of where the fire is heading now.



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Once it enters the Sisquoc drainage, wind and canyon will align, heading towards SBA? Looking at the maps, it looks like the fire is just next to the Sisquoc. Are these back~firing operations or just the fire being out of control?
GoletaResident (anonymous profile)
August 14, 2009 at 5:51 p.m. (Suggest removal)
About the photo captioned "... The cumulous clouds above are evidence of where the fire is heading now," are those dark billowing thangs hydrocephalic clouds or carboniferous smoke signals? If it's water vapor, then something's going on here that's little known to the general public! I wouldn't put it past wildfire in 87 year old brush to create its own weather, but wouldn't that be generally known? Anyone with expertise or a firm clue, please shed some light!
Adonis_Tate (anonymous profile)
August 14, 2009 at 8:51 p.m. (Suggest removal)
If the entire National Forest in SB Co gets fried in one or two years, where will spores, seeds and baby animals come from to repopulate? Doubtless the majority of species would laugh at my concern if they could, being fire-adapted, but there have got to be some that are simply turning to soot, bye bye, nice knowin' ya.
Global warming if real will make my concerns a total joke. This time around, advancing and retreating glaciers won't be attended by complete ecosystems migrating north or south with their favored climates. Nature's too fragmented for that, now.
Enjoy your National Forest while you can!
Adonis_Tate (anonymous profile)
August 14, 2009 at 9:03 p.m. (Suggest removal)
Word has it the Martin Mars 'Super scooper' out of Lake Ellsinore tested Lake Cachuma late this afternoon and is ready to go.
No word when they will start but most likely if homes in Tepesquet or Colson Cyn.s are threatened.
to 'GoletaResident' don't be such an alarmist. Learn to read a map. SBA is not in anyway in the path of this fire.
ah (anonymous profile)
August 14, 2009 at 10:24 p.m. (Suggest removal)
People are born ~ suffer ~ then die. Pyro~Mucusous~clouds, or not. In the land of true imbeciles, this does matter not much. Allright ~ another firestorm again is coming our way. No~one beliefs it; nothing new under the (smokey) sun.
GoletaResident (anonymous profile)
August 15, 2009 at 12:49 a.m. (Suggest removal)
To: ah ~ don't be such an alarmist! HuHu ~ super~duper~icy~scooper I prayed to arrive ever since Zaca, but since then I did learn my lessons (at least some of the required one's). As a note: during recent local fires here in and around Goleta, kcoy coverage seemed to have been quite objective; but now that a local fire is 'in their face' their coverage seemed to have dropped {at the very moment it should have picked up} ~ oh well...lessons learned from Zaca ...at least here in analytical/alarmist Goleta.
Wishing well to every true neighbor.
GoletaResident (anonymous profile)
August 15, 2009 at 1 a.m. (Suggest removal)
75,486 acres per Inciweb as of Saturday am. If the fire continues to burn at its current pace/pattern that would be another 10,000 acres by Sunday am. At some point it should hit the Zaca and maybe even Gap "fire breaks". There it will stop; no more food to continue.
GoletaResident (anonymous profile)
August 15, 2009 at 8:47 a.m. (Suggest removal)
Throughout the Zaca Fire burn area, there were enough "pockets" of unburned areas that offered refuge for fleeing animals and then a source of healthy vegetation to provide new seeds when the time was ripe to spread. Seeing this firsthand and how much has already grown back, I can tell you... mother nature will outlast us all no problem. As for us humans, we should be more concerned with our sources of water and our unsustainable population growth. As for our local population of alarmists and anthropomorphics, take a hike and chill out.
LRaf (anonymous profile)
August 15, 2009 at 10:27 a.m. (Suggest removal)
Like a star in the sky.
That shining
star reappears
like a final
touch near a
vigorous cliff;
and always
remains, with
a little intention
in the care
of your sight.
Francesco Sinibaldi
Sinibaldi (anonymous profile)
August 15, 2009 at 1:36 p.m. (Suggest removal)
Fire, fire...
Rising higher,
Reaching for the mountain top!
Ever, ever...
Flames are burning,
Until no more crop is left!
Baudelaire
GoletaResident (anonymous profile)
August 15, 2009 at 8:45 p.m. (Suggest removal)
Ever more, ever more...
Eternal flames are burning!
While all hell broke loose;
Souls are turning!
Like witches coming out of...
graves!
But here comes "Mad Max';
putting out eternal flames!
GoletaResident (anonymous profile)
August 15, 2009 at 9:39 p.m. (Suggest removal)
I've created a website where you can leave messages at specific locations on a map. I think it could be usefull for the discussion about the fire. Check it out at www.mapnex.com/La_Brea_Fire
timobile (anonymous profile)
August 17, 2009 at 12:35 a.m. (Suggest removal)