Los Angeles Times

‘Beast’ of a blaze rages on despite all-out battle

Crews dig in to cut off Thomas fire before forecast winds push it toward Santa Barbara.

- By Joseph Serna, Javier Panzar and Matt Hamilton

SANTA BARBARA — More than a week after the Thomas fire began in Ventura County, destroying hundreds of homes and displacing thousands as it grew into a massive inferno, firefighte­rs are now in a race to protect the pristine coastal communitie­s of neighborin­g Santa Barbara County before a shift in powerful winds forecast for this weekend.

Across the mountain ridges above Santa Barbara, Summerland and Montecito, firefighte­rs Wednesday were building containmen­t lines, clearing brush, digging breaks and setting small backfires to burn fuel, all in an effort to create barriers to stop the forward march of the fire.

Conditions so far this week have been favorable, allowing firefighte­rs to attack the f lames on the southweste­rn flank of the blaze as it moves west toward the Santa Ynez Mountains.

But the National Weather Service was forecastin­g sundowner winds blowing southeast at up to 35 mph Friday night, followed by Santa Ana winds Saturday that, at up to 45 mph, could steer the fire toward the southwest.

“When the wind starts pushing it, we can throw everything we have at it and it’s not going to do any good,” Mark Brown, an operations section chief for the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection, told Santa Barbara residents Wednesday night.

The stakes are high. If the fire moves into Santa Barbara and Montecito, nearly a quarter of a million residents and 62,000 structures worth $46 billion would be at risk.

As firefighte­rs well know, sundowner winds are notoriousl­y unpredicta­ble. The winds occur when hot air from the Santa Ynez Valley rises and swiftly pours over the mountain passes toward the Pacific Ocean, as if a person pressed a thumb over the end of a hose.

“It creates very erratic wind conditions, which are very difficult to predict and very difficult to fight fire in,” said Capt. Brendan Ripley, a fire behavior analyst with the Ventura County Fire Department. “It moves fire in different directions. It changes throughout the day.”

If crews can’t finish the containmen­t line across a roughly six-mile stretch in the mountains fast enough to stop the fire’s march west, firefighte­rs may have to burn the fuel themselves — a risky propositio­n and a scary sight for residents.

“It’s a proactive approach to fight the fire on our terms instead of on Mother Nature’s terms,” Brown said. “It’s well-coordinate­d if we do it. We’ve had numerous subject-matter experts put the plan together. It’s been vetted at all levels. All the local authoritie­s have looked at it and approved it.”

Fire officials stressed that this plan would be used only if the weekend wind events occur as predicted and if crews can’t make a stand and fight the fire directly. The controlled blaze would burn up to 4,000 acres and be started when winds are favorable for firefighte­rs.

Meanwhile, firefighte­rs hoped to slow the blaze by building breaks into areas that have less vegetation because those areas burned in the last decade, said Chris Childers, a battalion chief with the Santa Barbara County Fire Department.

About 600 fire engines are jammed into the narrow, winding roads in the Santa Barbara County foothills. Trucks are spraying retardant on grassy hillsides, and firefighte­rs are wrapping small, indefensib­le buildings in metallic sheeting that looks like tinfoil to reduce the chances they ignite.

As smoke cleared and visibility improved, a conga line of low-flying helicopter­s started arriving at a county park in Santa Barbara off Highway 154 to pick up fire retardant. Officials said 33 helicopter­s and eight airplanes were dropping water and retardant on the blaze.

As of Wednesday night, the Thomas fire had burned more than 238,000 acres and was 30% contained. It has destroyed more than 900 homes in Ventura and Santa Barbara counties since it began Dec. 4 near Thomas Aquinas College in Santa Paula. In its first day, the fire spread southwest, toward Ventura, and northwest, eventually hugging Ojai before pushing to the coast.

With containmen­t lines now protecting Ventura and Santa Paula, firefighte­rs there have been on a “seek and destroy” mission for any lingering hot spots that could threaten avocado groves, fire officials said Wednesday.

“This fire is a beast and you’re gonna kill it,” Martin Johnson, Santa Barbara County fire division chief, told fire crews at a morning briefing. “I have no doubt.”

Authoritie­s said it will probably take months to determine the cause of the Thomas fire.

 ?? Mel Melcon Los Angeles Times ?? ONLOOKERS watch a firefighti­ng plane battling the Thomas fire near Carpinteri­a on Monday. If winds push the fire into Santa Barbara and Montecito, a quarter of a million people and 62,000 structures would be at risk.
Mel Melcon Los Angeles Times ONLOOKERS watch a firefighti­ng plane battling the Thomas fire near Carpinteri­a on Monday. If winds push the fire into Santa Barbara and Montecito, a quarter of a million people and 62,000 structures would be at risk.
 ?? Photograph­s by Al Seib Los Angeles Times ?? FIREFIGHTE­RS douse flames north of Ventura last week. If crews can’t finish a containmen­t line before winds pick up, they may have to burn brush themselves. “It’s a proactive approach to fight the fire on our terms instead of on Mother Nature’s terms,”...
Photograph­s by Al Seib Los Angeles Times FIREFIGHTE­RS douse flames north of Ventura last week. If crews can’t finish a containmen­t line before winds pick up, they may have to burn brush themselves. “It’s a proactive approach to fight the fire on our terms instead of on Mother Nature’s terms,”...
 ??  ?? SINCE it erupted Dec. 4, the Thomas fire had burned more than 238,000 acres. It was 30% contained.
SINCE it erupted Dec. 4, the Thomas fire had burned more than 238,000 acres. It was 30% contained.

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