Los Angeles Times

Fate of Big Santa Anita Canyon’s cabins unclear

Remote rural outpost feared lost in Bobcat fire

- By Hayley Smith

Crumbled rock, ash and dust carpet the winding road into Big Santa Anita Canyon, a remote outpost just north of Arcadia in the confines of the Angeles National Forest.

The canyon has long been a popular destinatio­n for hikers and tourists looking to escape the urban trappings of Los Angeles, but on Tuesday afternoon, it was eerily quiet: The road has been blocked since the Bobcat fire swept through the area days before, leaving in its wake a barren moonscape of seared and naked hills.

The massive fire, which has burned more than 113,000 acres since igniting Sept. 6, has been fickle from the start. At times, fire crews seemed to be playing whacka-mole with the flames, achieving containmen­t at one edge only to see an unex

pected flare-up at another.

Yet the fire’s erratic behavior, which has necessitat­ed evacuation­s from Sierra Madre to Pearblosso­m, is what appears to have spared portions of the canyon, including the Adams’ Pack Station and picnic area, which emerged largely unscathed save for a handful of burn spots. “I’m so grateful that my place is still standing,” said Maggie Moran, who lives in and owns Adams’ Pack Station. “I was expecting it not to be. Everything around us burned.”

Not yet accounted for, however, are 80 historic cabins and the separate 1893built Sturtevant Camp, all of which are tucked deeper into the canyon. Built between 1907 and 1936, the cabins are part of a unique relationsh­ip between Angelenos and the national forest.

“Cabin owners own the building and lease the land,” U.S. Forest Service spokesman Andrew Mitchell said.

Private owners of the cabins, which sit on federal land, are granted 20-year special-use permits from the Forest Service. The cabins can’t be purchased using a mortgage, and owners cannot use them as their primary residence.

The result is a small, close-knit community of people who “gather to work on each other’s cabins and socialize together, bonded by our shared experience and love for this unique place that has been a community since the early 1900s,” said Ben Fitzsimmon­s, president of the Big Santa Anita Canyon Permittees Assn.

The cabins aren’t accessible by car. The closest is a three-quarter-mile hike from the pack station, and the most distant is four miles in. Donkeys can transport personal items for $1 a pound. There is no electricit­y, no municipal water, no septic system, no garbage service and no address, according to the cabin associatio­n.

“A cabin owner here is in custody of a living example of California history and should respect it as such,” the associatio­n says on its website.

Now, the community fears the worst.

“We think we lost most of it,” Deb Burgess, a cabin owner and president of the Sturtevant Camp, said in the days after the flare-up in the forest.

As of Wednesday, no one — neither fire crews nor cabin owners — had laid eyes on the cabins or camp.

The access trail is littered with fallen rocks and trees, and officials said it will require hand crews and mechanical work to make it passable.

Moran said the community is both “hopeful and mourning” while cabin owners await informatio­n.

“Some people have had those cabins since before they were born, and they have been passed down through generation after generation,” she said. “And although it wasn’t their main home, some people literally spent every weekend in the cabin, and so you feel their loss.”

Cabin owners are also doubtful about whether the Forest Service will allow any burned structures to be rebuilt. Burgess said she was previously told that anything more than 50% destroyed could not be restored.

“That’s a hard question,” Mitchell said of the possibilit­y of rebuilding. “There are historical factors, but these are extreme circumstan­ces.”

The community is now stuck in limbo as it waits for an official update, which may take weeks, or longer.

Standing in the canyon, it’s easy to imagine the outcome going either way: The unpredicta­ble fire left some hillsides black, while others remain green and untouched, some trees dead and others standing tall.

Yet the view from inside the canyon also reinforces the difficulty — and the magnitude — of what fire crews are battling. President Trump’s claims that California should have “raked the floor” of its forests better to prevent the spread of historic wildfires seems out of touch with the vast terrain.

On Tuesday, chairs and tables at the shuttered pack station sat like ghostly reminders of the once-thriving outdoor destinatio­n.

The canyon was quiet, save for a soot-blackened squirrel that ran across the pack station’s deck, a welcome sign of life amid a fire season characteri­zed by uncertaint­y.

‘Some people have had those cabins since before they were born, and they have been passed down through generation after generation.’ — Deb Burgess, cabin owner and president of Sturtevant Camp

 ?? Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times ?? THE BOBCAT fire has bedeviled firefighte­rs with its unpredicta­ble behavior. Above, smoke settles at sunset Tuesday near Angeles Crest Highway.
Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times THE BOBCAT fire has bedeviled firefighte­rs with its unpredicta­ble behavior. Above, smoke settles at sunset Tuesday near Angeles Crest Highway.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States