Los Angeles Times

Prickly invaders blow into town

Victorvill­e residents contend with giant tumbleweed piles that block doors, fill yards.

- By Javier Panzar

When she rose from bed early Monday, Nancy Martinez-Brown could hear the howl of a fierce Mojave Desert wind.

She knew what that meant: Tumbleweed­s.

Not the little Wild West things you see in cartoons, but massive, wind-driven tumbleweed­s measuring 3 or 4 feet wide and just as tall. Dry thorny things that bunch up together to form big prickly boulders that block doors and garages.

She could already hear them scratching against the second-story windows of her Victorvill­e home.

When noon arrived and the winds hadn’t let up, she knew things were going to be bad.

As the day wore on, and wind gusts reached nearly 50 mph in the high desert, more and more tumbleweed­s swept into this neighbor-

hood on the southern edge of town, bombarding some 150 houses off Mesa Street.

The prickly orbs bounced through the air and bunched up in front of doorways, in side yards, in backyards and against fences. Some residents had their front doors blocked, while others could escape their homes only through the garage.

“There is no stopping them,” Martinez-Brown said. “They pile up 5 feet tall. It does get scary.”

About 100 homeowners needed assistance clearing the mess from their property, said Victorvill­e spokeswoma­n Sue Jones.

“The crazy thing about tumbleweed­s is that they are extremely thorny, they connect together like Legos,” she said. “You can’t reach out and grab them and move them. You need special tools. They really hurt.”

The city dispatched code enforcemen­t officers, public works crews and its trashhauli­ng contractor­s to start clearing the neighborho­od. A 15-person fire crew even showed up to assist in the effort.

Crews used pitchforks to pile the invaders into garbage trucks, which crushed and compacted them.

“It was all hands on deck,” Jones said.

This isn’t the first time the neighborho­od has found itself in tumbleweed trouble. The group of houses is located in a particular­ly precarious

‘There is no stopping them. They pile up 5 feet tall. It does get scary.’

— Nancy Martinez-Brown, Victorvill­e resident

geographic position with open desert to the south and east.

A field south of the neighborho­od goes on for more than half a mile until it hits the east branch of the California Aqueduct. Then there’s more desert beyond that.

“We don’t have any neighbors across the street,” said Martinez-Brown. “We have the desert. It is like a little wind tunnel straight into this neighborho­od.”

The windy conditions are typical for the high desert area, but Martinez-Brown pointed out that humans haven’t made it easier on themselves.

A lot across the street from her home was cleared of Joshua trees and large creosote bushes that typically dot the desert landscape to make way for more homes about 10 years ago.

But since the economy crashed, the land has sat barren waiting for housing that hasn’t come, stripped of the vegetation that once served as a natural wind break when tumbleweed­s came barreling through.

“There is nothing to stop them,” she said.

Jones, the city spokeswoma­n, said it is hard to say which specific lots produce tumbleweed­s when homes face such vast stretches of desert.

“When you are that close to undevelope­d land, tumbleweed­s can happen,” she said.

A low-pressure system brought strong winds across Southern California on Monday. Gusts reached 71 mph at one peak in the San Diego County mountains and 60 mph in Palm Desert, according to the National Weather Service.

The strong jet stream shrank as it moved east into the Rocky Mountains, but strong winds are expected to return to the Southland on Wednesday night and remain through Friday.

A high wind warning will be in effect through Friday morning for the mountain and desert regions of the Coachella Valley as well as Riverside and San Diego counties.

 ?? Gina Ferazzi Los Angeles Times ?? CITY WORKER Andrew Quarton clears tumbleweed­s behind a San Bernardino County fire station.
Gina Ferazzi Los Angeles Times CITY WORKER Andrew Quarton clears tumbleweed­s behind a San Bernardino County fire station.
 ?? GIna Ferazzi Los Angeles Times ?? TUMBLEWEED­S fill James Reyes’ side yard. About 100 people needed help clearing their properties. “They connect together like Legos,” city spokeswoma­n Sue Jones said. “You need special tools. They really hurt.”
GIna Ferazzi Los Angeles Times TUMBLEWEED­S fill James Reyes’ side yard. About 100 people needed help clearing their properties. “They connect together like Legos,” city spokeswoma­n Sue Jones said. “You need special tools. They really hurt.”

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