Los Angeles Times

Rain means relief, anxiety

Santa Barbara hopes the coming storm won’t start mudslides

- By Leila Miller, Hannah Fry, Marisa Gerber and Colleen Shalby

SANTA BARBARA — Gordon Sichi rebuilt his house in the same spot where in 1990 he had lost it to flames.

He loved this place — this cluster of homes in the mountains north of Santa Barbara — but the Painted Cave fire had taught him a lesson. Through the years he did what he could to protect the house, adding a metal roof, fire-resistant windows and a more-than-$90,000 system that with a touch of a button on his phone, remotely causes sprinklers to douse the home with thousands of gallons of water.

When a wildfire again tore through these hills on Monday evening, Sichi decided not to evacuate with his wife. Instead, he drove to a hill that overlooks his community and stared at his home on his phone, thanks to night-vision cameras he’d installed near his chimney.

“My house is a castle,” Sichi said. “It’s my kids’ inheritanc­e.”

For thousands of residents in the hills northwest of Santa Barbara, the Cave fire, which started just before sunset Monday, brought back terrifying memories of 1990, when in two hours, flames ripped through the mountains and burned all the way to the sea,

destroying more than 400 homes and killing a woman who tried to seek shelter from the fire in a creek behind her house.

And when they considered the forecast, they couldn’t help but think too of a more recent tragedy — the deadly 2018 Montecito mudslides that came when rain pelted the fresh burn scars of the Thomas fire. So this week, when residents prayed for rain, they asked for simple showers. Not torrents, not again, not like 2018.

This was the risky scenario playing out in Santa Barbara County on Tuesday, as firefighte­rs and residents hoped that the coming storm would slow the fire that was threatenin­g homes without unleashing a deluge that could cause more lifethreat­ening damage.

The storm already was pounding Northern California with heavy snow and wind, closing Interstate 80 for periods and bringing steady rain to the Bay Area. Rain was expected to hit Southern California early Wednesday through Thursday, raising concerns about mudflows in burn areas and possible closure of major freeways such as Interstate 5 and 15 by snow.

In Sonoma County, where the Kincade fire burned tens of thousands of acres last month, officials issued a flash-flood watch for Tuesday, warning people who live downstream of the burn scar to prepare for rockslides, debris flows and flash flooding.

But much of the focus Tuesday was on Santa Barbara, where the autumn forces of fire and rain were converging.

On Tuesday, Julie Kummel stood at a lookout point in the mountains near her home and thought about the nearby blackened patch of ground — the burn scar.

“It won’t be pretty down there,” Kummel said. “There’ll be mudslides.”

The Cave fire started soon after 4 p.m. Monday. As the wind howled through the canyons, flames chewed down the hillsides toward communitie­s in Santa Barbara and Goleta, spurring evacuation­s. But then, fire officials said, erratic winds twisted the flames in the opposite direction, sending them back up the steep, rocky terrain toward the firefighte­rs.

The fire, which had burned more than 4,300 acres by Tuesday afternoon, seemed to be sprinting along Highway 154 on Monday night, said Santa Barbara County Fire Capt. Daniel Bertucelli. He was going 55 mph, he said, and the fire matched his pace.

Soon backup firefighte­rs from Ventura and L.A. counties arrived, and engines pulled into neighborho­ods to defend homes in the fire’s path. Bulldozers and hand crews dug into the dirt, creating a containmen­t line around the perimeter, hoping to stop the spread.

And by Tuesday afternoon, clouds had started to roll in. This time, it seemed, the rain gods had answered.

“This may be the rare situation where rainfall puts out a coastal Southern California wildfire,” said Daniel Swain, a climate scientist with UCLA and the National Center for Atmospheri­c Research.

While the precipitat­ion — part of an unusually cold front sweeping across the state — will likely tamp down, and maybe even end, the fire season, Swain said that the rain also brings concerns of debris flows and flash flooding. Normally, Swain noted, there is some time between the fire season and the rainy season, when officials build berms to divert water and map out flood evacuation plans.

This time, he said, there will be “absolutely no time to do mitigation,” which, he noted, could be especially traumatic for Santa Barbara-area residents, who survived last year’s mudslides.

“Fire followed by rain,” he said softly. “That’s going to be tough for a lot of folks.”

On Monday evening in Santa Barbara County, a few miles from the flames of the Cave fire, Irene Lamberti, 90, was relaxing at home after her swim aerobics class. She’d seen smoke on her drive, but doubted that she would need to evacuate, so she settled in for an episode of “Antiques Roadshow.”

Then around 8 p.m., an official knocked at the door and told her that people in her neighborho­od were evacuating. Lamberti and her 88-year-old husband roamed their home, shoving items into a small suitcase. When they arrived at Goleta Valley Community Center, a shelter for evacuees, she realized that they’d forgotten toothbrush­es and her husband’s pajamas.

But, Lamberti said, they’d remembered something much harder to replace — a Japanese embroidery of a geisha that Lamberti had been working on for months. “Our house is like a museum,” she said. “You can’t take everything. I wasn’t going to leave that.”

While lesser in scale, this week’s fire stood as a somber echo to last year’s Camp fire, the deadliest in state history. For two years in a row, while some California­ns rushed out to buy last-minute turkeys or headed to the airport to reunite with loved ones, others have followed a seasonal rhythm dictated by fire.

Last year, Thanksgivi­ng in Paradise in the Camp fire’s aftermath meant meals at shelters and searching for silver linings. For one couple, it meant making peace with the loss of a beloved home in the forest. For another man, a recovering alcoholic who’d lost his home and was now yearning for a drink, it meant reminding himself that he was strong.

This year, in Santa Barbara County, instead of packing for a Thanksgivi­ng road trip, people scrambled to pack a lifetime of memories in a few minutes, along with a few clothes, medicine, and family photos.

Then they drove away from their homes.

Miller reported from Santa Barbara, Gerber, Fry and Shalby from Los Angeles. Times staff writer Jaclyn Cosgrove in Los Angeles and Rong-Gong Lin II in San Francisco contribute­d to this report.

 ?? Photograph­s by Al Seib Los Angeles Times ?? A PLANE drops fire retardant Tuesday on the hillsides of the Santa Ynez Mountains above Santa Barbara.
Photograph­s by Al Seib Los Angeles Times A PLANE drops fire retardant Tuesday on the hillsides of the Santa Ynez Mountains above Santa Barbara.
 ??  ?? SMOKE RISES behind the Santa Barbara Mission on Tuesday morning as the Cave fire chars the hills.
SMOKE RISES behind the Santa Barbara Mission on Tuesday morning as the Cave fire chars the hills.
 ?? Al Seib Los Angeles Times ?? SANTA BARBARA County firefighte­rs douse hot spots along Highway 154 as the Cave fire burns uphill in the Santa Ynez Mountains.
Al Seib Los Angeles Times SANTA BARBARA County firefighte­rs douse hot spots along Highway 154 as the Cave fire burns uphill in the Santa Ynez Mountains.
 ?? Al Seib Los Angeles Times ?? RAY FORD with Noozhawk watches the brush erupt in f lames along Painted Cave Road on Tuesday as fire rips through the hillsides above Santa Barbara.
Al Seib Los Angeles Times RAY FORD with Noozhawk watches the brush erupt in f lames along Painted Cave Road on Tuesday as fire rips through the hillsides above Santa Barbara.
 ?? Apu Gomes Getty Images ?? A HELICOPTER fights the Cave fire at Los Padres National Forest near Santa Barbara. The fire started Monday afternoon and prompted evacuation­s.
Apu Gomes Getty Images A HELICOPTER fights the Cave fire at Los Padres National Forest near Santa Barbara. The fire started Monday afternoon and prompted evacuation­s.

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