Before:
After:
I just put up a gallery of shots I took as the sun was going down today, and the evacuation barricades were lifted — at least from some of the Tea Fire burn area.
The aerial shot above is from the excellent Live Search Maps. If you want to look around, the top shot is in this view here.
Most of my shots were after the sun went down, so they’re not the best. But they reveal some of what went on at the western edge of the fire perimeter.
Most of the houses north of Sheffield Reservoir (which is now buried beneath a park) were spared. But many along Gibraltar, El Cielito and West Mountain Road (such as the one above, a beautiful house with a view across a pool and Parma Park) were burned. It wrenched my heart to see residents visiting some of these homes. They weren’t all “mansions”, as the out-of-town media called them. Many were not even especially upscale. But most were beautiful, and all were in a beautiful setting. And they were homes. They contained the lives of their residents. Lives that will have to start over in many ways.
We know people who lost homes here. Our hearts go out to them.
One thing that amazed me was how good a job the firefighters did protecting many homes in this area. One official said it would have been reasonable to expect to lose 500 or more homes in a fire like this one.
I head back to the place our kid calls “alt.home” or “shift_home” in Boston tomorrow. Meanwhile I am appreciating every minute I’m here.
Meanwhile, here’s a thankful shout-out to the firefighters who did their best to save what they could. Which happens to be the rest of Santa Barbara.
Bonus pic: Here’s exactly the same area, after the Sycamore Canyon fire in 1977.
[Later…] I’m on a pit stop at the Starbucks Coffee & Reggae Disco in King City, where the music is so loud that people go outside to talk on their cell phones. Just did that myself.
It was weird to hit SCAN on the rental car radio and have it stop at 87.7, where KSBY/Channel 6 in San Luis Obispo was running a live press conference on the Tea Fire from Santa Barbara. I stayed with it until the signal gave out around San Ardo. Meanwhile, here’s what I picked up that matters: Homes were lost on the folowing roads:
- Coyote Road
- Coyote Circle
- East Mountain Drive
- West Mountain Drive
- El Cielito
- Gibraltar Road
- Las Alturas Road
- Orizaba Road
- Orizaba Lane
- Conejo Road
- Stanwood Road
- Sycamore Canyon Road
- Ealand Place (not sure, but I think so)
- Mt. Calvary Road (including the Monastery and Retreat Center)
- Westmont Road/Circle Drive (not clear about this, but I believe so)
They said 210 structures were lost. More than 5000 homes were evacuated across a large area outside the fire perimeter, ours among them.
Only residents with government-issued IDs will be let into the main burn areas: Mountain Road, Conejo, Coyote, a few others.
Okay, hitting the road again. Next stop, SFO. Then BOS and back to work.
[Later…] I’m at SFO now. No time to say more than to look at this map, this City 2.0 summary, and these images and headlines.
Oh, and look at this. It’s the same scene after the 1977 Sycamore Fire. Some home sites have burned three times: In the 1964 Coyote Fire, the Sycamore Fire, and now the Tea Fire.