Los Angeles Times

Ojai is in the crosshairs

Picturesqu­e town’s residents worry as Thomas fire nears

- By Louis Sahagun, Matt Hamilton and Harriet Ryan

OJAI — The people who pressed into the fire station in downtown Ojai were scared and hoping for reassuranc­e. From the streetcorn­ers of this picturesqu­e valley town, they could see flames marching along the mountain ridge to the north. Firetrucks rumbled by winetastin­g rooms, meditation retreats and spas toward a second wall of fire moving in from the south and east.

One citizen after another approached the station’s front counter Wednesday with a version of the same question: Is Ojai going to burn?

And one by one they received the same disconcert­ing reply: We just don’t know.

On the third day of the Thomas fire’s rampage across Ventura County, Ojai, a bucolic community long beloved by spiritual seekers, health enthusiast­s and celebritie­s, was in the crosshairs of the massive blaze.

The California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection rushed heavy equipment and crews to the

southeast part of the Ojai Valley in a bid to protect the town of about 7,000 from the devastatio­n that befell other areas. The fire, which began near Thomas Aquinas College on Monday, destroyed communitie­s in Ventura, Santa Paula and elsewhere, consuming more than 150 structures. About 50,000 people have been evacuated throughout Ventura County.

The 65,500-acre fire continued burning from the Pacific Ocean to the inland mountains Wednesday, with its northern edge coursing northeast from Ventura along a 20-mile front that extended along the southern border of the Ojai Valley.

“The fire is here, and wrapped around the community,” said Shane Lauderdale, a Cal Fire branch director, as he huddled with other officials in a downtown parking lot.

Santa Ana winds, which have driven the devastatin­g wildfires across Southern California, were somewhat weaker Wednesday, but they were expected to ramp up after midnight Thursday and reach “extreme” speeds of up to 70 mph. Such winds can expand fires by miles in a matter of minutes and were of great concern to fire officials preparing to defend Ojai.

At a morning briefing for firefighte­rs, officials emphasized the importance of keeping the fire’s northern boundary from reaching Ojai. Cal Fire Operations Chief Mark Higgins urged crews to extinguish even the smallest smoldering areas.

“Don’t pass that bush on fire,” Higgins said. “Get in there, get dirty and work hard.”

Looking over a map of the Ojai Valley spread over the hood of a vehicle as ash fell around him, Lauderdale said crews were cutting fire lines on the outskirts of town and moving heavy equipment into place in anticipati­on of a wind-whipped surge of fire Thursday.

“We’re taking advantage of the current calm to concentrat­e resources along a defensive line,” he said. “We’re going to get a lot more work done today.”

Fire has damaged Ojai and its surroundin­g region in the past, including a 1917 blaze that burned the town. But authoritie­s and citizens said this year’s wine country fires, which left 44 dead and entire suburban neighborho­ods in rubble, intensifie­d fears.

“Until we have fog drifting in from the west and light rain, we won’t feel like this thing is behind us,” said City Manager Steve McClary.

Eastern portions of the valley were under mandatory evacuation orders. In town, there were no evacuation orders in effect, but many residents and business owners were leaving voluntaril­y.

The town, known for its Spanish architectu­re and distinctiv­e bell tower, was covered in a dusting of ash Wednesday. “Closed” signs hung in windows of boutiques, restaurant­s and bedand-breakfasts. The Ojai Valley Inn, a nationally renowned resort and the site of celebrity weddings, was among the businesses closed.

“I’ve been telling people, ‘If you can get your loved ones and valuables to a safe place, you should,’ ” McClary said. “That’s a tough answer to give. I wish I could be more specific. But this is no time for false promises.”

On Wednesday morning, Doug LaBarre, 70, was among many residents who bellied up to the counter of a downtown fire station with an urgent question for Capt. Paul Berrera. “The city itself is not threatened, right?” LaBarre asked. “My 95-yearold father lives in my guesthouse. So are we safe?”

“All I can tell you,” Berrera said with a sympatheti­c smile, “is this: To ensure your father’s safety, prepare to leave if necessary.”

The fire transforme­d some of the features visitors and residents love most about Ojai — including its sense of isolation — into dangers. The only ways in and out of town are two-lane country roads.

The blaze also made its treasured oak trees — the remnants of an ancient oak forest — into weapons. The powerful winds knocked over many of the enormous trees, and there were fears that falling ash could start fires in their sprawling branches.

At daybreak, Juan Hernandez, 32, stood on the trunk of a toppled oak for a better view of flames kicking up on the ridgelines just north of town.

“This tree was huge and strong,” he said, shaking his head. “But it was no match for those winds.”

Long known as a spiritual hub, Ojai is home to numerous retreat centers, meditation houses and campuses for new age movements. Many closed temporaril­y or limited their hours.

At Meditation Mount in the Upper Ojai Valley, the fire burned one building and damaged the group’s gardens, according to the organizati­on’s Facebook page. The page showed a photo from last year of their idyllic campus, asking followers: “Hold *this* Mount in your heart as you cultivate love and compassion.”

Ojai Retreat, a bed-andbreakfa­st with a spiritual bent on a hilltop near downtown Ojai, was untouched by the fire, but founder Ulrich Brugger, 73, briefly evacuated, only to return late Tuesday. Brugger came to Ojai from Switzerlan­d nearly three decades ago after meeting Jiddu Krishnamur­ti, a new age philosophe­r who taught there. He said the spirituali­ty that seems imbued in the town has also equipped him to respond to such a potential catastroph­e.

“One thing I learned from Krishnamur­ti: don’t be attached to anything, including property. That’s not the main thing.”

 ?? Genaro Molina Los Angeles Times ?? A FIREFIGHTE­R walks through a property on Linda Flora Drive in Bel-Air as flames from the Skirball fire encroach. By Wednesday evening, four homes were destroyed and 11 more had been damaged in the blaze.
Genaro Molina Los Angeles Times A FIREFIGHTE­R walks through a property on Linda Flora Drive in Bel-Air as flames from the Skirball fire encroach. By Wednesday evening, four homes were destroyed and 11 more had been damaged in the blaze.
 ?? Al Seib Los Angeles Times ?? THE THOMAS fire, in its third day, advances toward the Pacific Ocean between Solimar and Faria beaches north of downtown Ventura on Wednesday.
Al Seib Los Angeles Times THE THOMAS fire, in its third day, advances toward the Pacific Ocean between Solimar and Faria beaches north of downtown Ventura on Wednesday.
 ?? Wally Skalij Los Angeles Times ?? VIOLET CHOHEN sweeps up outside her store on Highway 150 in Ojai. The town was covered in a dusting of ash Wednesday, and “closed” signs hung in windows of boutiques, restaurant­s and bed-and-breakfasts.
Wally Skalij Los Angeles Times VIOLET CHOHEN sweeps up outside her store on Highway 150 in Ojai. The town was covered in a dusting of ash Wednesday, and “closed” signs hung in windows of boutiques, restaurant­s and bed-and-breakfasts.

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