Los Angeles Times

Focus on a close- up red object

The frantic fight to save Mt. Wilson Observator­y from fire

- By Hayley Smith

It was a week into the Bobcat fire and 300- foot f lames were lapping at the historic Mt. Wilson Observator­y.

This was the moment firefighte­rs and observator­y officials had been fearing: the fire striking a direct blow to the complex. Glowing red embers chewed through brush and trees, and thick smoke billowed into dark skies typically reserved for stargazing.

“It was gaining a flame-front we couldn’t manage,” said Oscar Vargas, division chief for the Angeles National Forest. “One that could destroy the observator­y.”

Vargas described an infernal scene of smoke and heat as he and more than 100 firefighte­rs moved into position atop the hill to try to save the famed site.

“It was intense,” he said. “We’d have to hold the lines when we could, back out when it was too hot, then jump back in with hoses and helicopter­s to mop the f lames down and prevent the loss of structures.”

The Bobcat fire’s path of destructio­n began Sept. 6. It quickly overtook a vast swath of the Angeles National Forest, charring hundreds of thousands of acres near the foothill neighborho­ods of the San Gabriel Valley and spreading all the way to the desert communitie­s of the Antelope Valley,

where dozens of structures have been damaged or destroyed.

But among the biggest worries of the blaze — now one of the largest in Los Angeles County history — has been Mt. Wilson, which repeatedly has come under threat from the fire.

Considered one of the cradles of astronomy, the observator­y was founded in 1904 by George Ellery Hale. When the 100- inch Hooker telescope gathered its f irst light on Nov. 1, 1917, it overtook its 60- inch neighbor and became the largest telescope in the world — a position it held for more than three decades.

On the night of Sept. 15, f lames came within just 5 feet of the storied structure.

“It sounded like a train, or a jet engine,” Vargas said of the aggressive blaze. “The way the f ire was spreading through the trees and all the brush — it was like an intense sizzling, cracking and popping.”

The battle would last for the better part of a week, during which time smoke from the f ire cast an ominous pall across much of Los Angeles County and contribute­d to air quality so poor that people were advised to stay inside with their doors and windows shut.

Thomas Meneghini, the observator­y’s executive director, waited with bated breath, fearing the worst.

“Our stuff is priceless, it’s irreplacea­ble,” Meneghini said. “There’s no monetary value you could put on these items.”

It was not the f irst time the observator­y had come under threat from wildfire. In 2009, the fight against the sprawling Station fire lasted five days and four nights, but ultimately the buildings perched atop the 5,710- foot mountain were saved.

The most recent battle serves as another reminder of how much is at stake there.

“We’ve been making a stand at Mt. Wilson,” L. A. County Fire Department Capt. Dave Gillotte said. “Half the time is very intense, and half the time is preparing for it to be very intense.”

And that preparatio­n helped pave the way for a chance at victory. A week later, the once- roaring hillside was quiet, and the observator­y had emerged unscathed.

Vargas credited tireless

f ire crews and a decade’s worth of fuel- reduction work — including the removal of hazardous dry brush and vegetation from the surroundin­g forest — in helping prevent destructio­n.

“The work we’ve done in

the last 10 years paid off big time,” he said.

“We had done several hundred acres of fuel treatment, so that helped defend and save Mt. Wilson.”

Mother Nature also offered an assist, as tempera

tures cooled slightly after the initial f irefight, the humidity increased and winds died down.

“The weather f inally cooperated,” Gillotte said, standing atop the nowsmolder­ing hillside. “We

were f inally able to see the fire and to get to the fire.”

Meneghini said the observator­y’s structures suffered little damage, save for a bit of scorched wiring.

“I actually got to sleep at a decent hour last night,” he said Thursday, a day after crews turned a corner on the evasive blaze.

A lingering smell of smoke and thousands of feet of hose lines snaking across the property are among the remnants of the battle.

And while the f ire’s containmen­t numbers continue to increase, the rugged landscape atop Mt. Wilson will be marked by the Bobcat f ire for some time: Bright pink f ire retardant dropped by aerial crews now paints a technicolo­r dreamscape across rocks, roadways and burned trees.

But f ire crews aren’t out of the woods yet. About f ive miles below the observator­y, at Highway 2 and Mt. Wilson Red Box Road, thick smoke settled in midweek like a blanket over the valley.

“There are still a lot of variables at play,” said L. A. County Fire Department spokesman Pono Barnes,

who was stationed at the intersecti­on. “Right now, we’re looking at wind, fuels and topographi­cal features.”

Although progress on the blaze — which is more than 50% contained — has been substantia­l, Barnes said, if the wind changes, there is “significan­t potential” for reignition.

With roads still closed to visitors, the world inside the national forest alternates between the peaceful silence of nature and the vibrating whir of helicopter­s, still dropping water and retardant into the smoky brush below.

There are other reminders of the fire’s wrath: Entire hillsides dotted with oncegreat pines now stand like blackened toothpicks, a symbol of what has become the worst wildfire season in California history.

Yellow hardhats bobbed up and down as f irefighter­s cleared their way, one step at a time, through thick vegetation, looking small under the vast expanse of sky as they continued to secure the forest.

But Mt. Wilson is safe — at least for now.

 ?? David McNew Getty I mages ?? RADIO TOWERS on Mt. Wilson are seen in the distance as the Bobcat f ire burns in Angeles National Forest. The historic observator­y is safe — for now.
David McNew Getty I mages RADIO TOWERS on Mt. Wilson are seen in the distance as the Bobcat f ire burns in Angeles National Forest. The historic observator­y is safe — for now.
 ?? I rfan Khan Los Angeles Times ?? A HELICOPTER drops water on the Bobcat f ire as it burns dangerousl­y close to the famed Mt. Wilson Observator­y on Sept. 16.
I rfan Khan Los Angeles Times A HELICOPTER drops water on the Bobcat f ire as it burns dangerousl­y close to the famed Mt. Wilson Observator­y on Sept. 16.
 ?? Myung J. Chun Los Angeles Times ?? “WE’VE BEEN making a stand at Mt. Wilson,” said Capt. Dave Gillotte, center, here working with his crew from the Los Angeles County Fire Department.
Myung J. Chun Los Angeles Times “WE’VE BEEN making a stand at Mt. Wilson,” said Capt. Dave Gillotte, center, here working with his crew from the Los Angeles County Fire Department.

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