Los Angeles Times | Oct 24, 2007
By Mike Anton, Seema Mehta and Jason Song
At least a dozen Orange County homes had burned by this morning and thousands more were in danger as flames as high as 75 feet devastated rural canyon communities, fire officials said.
The Santiago fire continued to push east today, fueled by brittle canyon brush as it threatened communities around Modjeska Canyon. On Tuesday, panicked residents begged firefighters for help.
“I lived through eight fires out here, and I’ve never seen anything like this,” Mark Jackson said before his century-old wooden home burned to the ground in Modjeska Canyon. “Why can’t you do anything?”
Local fire officials were similarly frustrated, arguing that if the state had provided adequate aircraft and personnel Sunday, the devastation could have been prevented.
The fire was set near Santiago and Silverado canyons in a way to maximize its spread, authorities said, and will probably take at least two weeks to contain.
“It is an absolute truth — had we had more air resources we would have been able to control this fire,” Orange County Fire Authority Chief Chip Prather said.
Erratic winds gusting up to 60 mph continued to fuel the arsonist’s blaze, which expanded to more than 19,200 acres this morning and prompted the evacuation of about 3,000 people.
Heat and flames in the Santa Ana Mountains were so intense that firefighters at times couldn’t safely enter Modjeska Canyon, where at least 11 homes were destroyed, officials said.
“It’s chaos right now, it’s total chaos,” said Assemblyman Todd Spitzer (R-Orange).
About 600 firefighters battled the blaze, which had a 38-mile perimeter and caused more than $10 million in damage. Late Tuesday afternoon, firefighters set backfires to stop flames from racing through O’Neill Regional Park and into Rancho Santa Margarita, and air-dropped fire retardant to halt the fire’s push into the Santiago Canyon Estates neighborhood.
Firefighters’ efforts were hampered by wind conditions, which at times grounded air tankers and helicopters.
A new challenge emerged as offshore Santa Ana winds collided with onshore coastal winds and air currents from the fire, creating a swirling micro-climate that made fighting the fire in tight canyons more dangerous and unpredictable.
The fire’s containment remained at 30%, unchanged since Monday.
Sue Geraci sobbed and nearly collapsed when she saw the burned remains of her multimillion-dollar Modjeska home.
“We have a pump house and water tank,” said Geraci, who had lived there five years.
“Our house was supposed to be fireproof. We watered and we watered and we watered.”
Mandatory evacuations began early Tuesday in Modjeska Canyon and spread to other canyon communities, including Silverado and Trabuco. Hundreds of animals, including horses and llamas, were evacuated to stables elsewhere in Southern California.
Shelters were set up at El Modena High School in Orange and El Toro High School in Lake Forest. About 270 evacuees from Orange and San Diego counties spent Monday night sleeping on cots in El Toro High’s gym. During the day, some took naps or crowded around a TV, eyes glued to the flashes of flame on the screen.
“I called home and heard my answering machine, so that’s good news,” said Kenneth Samuels, 67, of Fallbrook.
Sixty-one teenage boys living at a Trabuco Canyon juvenile detention center were evacuated about 6 a.m. to Santa Ana.
. . .
Related
Air tankers, copters grounded as fires took hold
A sky crane helicopter being used for the fire fighting effort scoops up water from the ninth hole at the TPC Valencia golf course in Valencia, Calif., as smoke rises from the Stevenson Ranch fire north of Los Angeles, Monday. As wildfires were charging across Southern California, nearly two dozen water-dropping helicopters and two massive cargo planes sat idly by, grounded by government rules and bureaucracy.
2 responses so far ↓
Sirius // October 27, 2007 at 5:13 pm
How many people are aware there was a ballot initiative in Orange County to prevent Blackwater from setting up headquarters there? Folks in OC didn’t want Blackwater, now coincidentally, the county burns. Hmm.
pjwalker911 // October 27, 2007 at 11:44 pm
nothing to worry about. just pure coincidence.
right…
Being as this was a well-organized attack on Socal, it would have taken extensive planning to do it and manpower and therefore money, an organized structure. Let’s see, someone with plenty of money, manpower, extensive military experience, mercenaries who are trained to kill anyone for a paycheck and who are above the law, protected by blanket immunity, who would have a vested interest (new facility at Potrero), who could be contracted out to hire other contractors for plausible denialability. Hmm…who could fit the bill?
Who best to carry it out than Blackwater? And where was the first fire lit? Where else but Potrero.
Let’s see….ahhh….2 plus 2…hmmm…yup 2 plus two still equals 4. I just checked.