.
Feedback

The Big Burn: Admiring Fire in the Foothills

Although catastrophic, the destruction and creation caused by southern California wildfires is a beautiful cycle to behold.


Whenever friends of mine living in other states speak disparagingly of L.A., the reason is always the same: “I couldn’t live without four seasons,” as if year round sunshine and idyllic temperatures are a big drawback instead of a huge asset.

But there are four distinct and well-rounded seasons, I tell them--Fall, Spring, Rainy and Fire.

 
My friends have never experienced towering waves of fury blotting out the sun in a hazy burn, rolling like the ocean over a wilderness as it consumes it, reducing a forest teeming with life to a desert of comprised only of remnants lingering like afternoon shadows.

And it’s these remains that hold the promise of future greenery.

As the summer’s fire season lays waste to a vibrant landscape, sending it into a winter of barren death, the next rebirth awaits it. It’s an unfamiliar cycle to those dwelling in more “traditional”  climates, and perhaps uncomfortable, that life could be so dependent on death.

But the fire season is what makes the landscape here thrive.

And so it goes every year, the city of angels sacrificing acres of outlying wilderness to the burn, one of the most amazing natural spectacles to behold--that is, if you don’t get too close to it.

Every year, homes are devoured by hungry flames and occasionally, people’s lives are swallowed in the carnage.

I’ve always been amazed how in Florida, one hurricane after another levels homes and mansions alike in a watery, airborne torrent, reinstating the ebb and flow of eternally shifting shores. Yet, despite knowing that a hurricane of some namesake or another will unleash holy havoc upon homes and the people who live in them, they choose to rebuild in the same spots.

Meanwhile, I’ve always thought the dangers we in the southland face--wind storms, mudslides, flash floods and earthquakes--aren’t as easily pegged down or named. We don’t know where they’ll happen--just that they will.

Beverly Hills has been shaken awake twice in one week, following on the heels of numerous other nearby tremors, in the same phenomenon that crafted the San Gabriel Mountains and its 970 square miles of terrain so rugged that surprises await even is experienced admirers.

Beset on the north by the infamous San Andreas Fault, the young range is crumbling even as it's born, scarred by the fault it wears like a birth mark, charred from recurring fires and baring the signs of violent cleansing.

But even fire season in the San Gabriels can be managed by knowing not only which way the wind blows, but the pattern of fires.

Rather than carrying out extensive brush clearance, which some have posited can lead to even bigger “megafires”, the U.S. Geological Survey recommends looking at where fires have occurred historically and avoiding building in those areas.

The most recent searing scourge has already resulted in an upwards of 12,000 evacuations over Labor Day weekend. According to the USGS, about 1000 homes are destroyed each year in Southern California, and not everyone can afford to rebuild.

Fires is human’s greatest tool, and it’s well-established that far from allowing wildfires to ravage villages, Native Americans utilized fire to shape their landscape with controlled burns. They also learned to allow fire, and all of nature’s forces, to shape the way they lived.

When residing in a landscape that’s beset by flames once a year, the wisest choice may be to steer clear of mother nature’s destructive path rather than plopping down in its midst and trying to get her to flow according to your whims.

Because if you don’t get too close to the flames, fire season unleashes a dazzling display of the violent and mysterious birth of the beauty we are fortunate to call home.

It’s the other terra-forming habit of Gaia--those earthquakes--that I really worry about. But strangely, my faraway friends never complain about those.

Have you seen the Williams fire?

Jesse Brown September 10, 2012 at 02:40 pm
All the bears are saying "Martha it's time to move outa this neighborhood!"

Newsletter & Alerts

Get the best stories each day and important breaking news

Subscribe

Not from Montrose-La Crescenta Patch? Find your Local Patch »

Note Article
Just a short thought to get the word out quickly about anything in your neighborhood.
Share something with your neighbors. Write a new post... What's up? Make an announcement, speak your mind, or sell something
MISSING ID TAG IS CASED IN BLACK
Lee June 18, 2013 at 03:15 am
Good Morning Robert and thank you for your response.
Lee June 18, 2013 at 03:18 am
To answer your statement, we did look for over 2 hours. Not assumption of fact, it was lost eitherRead More in the establishment or just outside it.
Lee June 18, 2013 at 03:31 am
We spoke with the restaurant and they were so very helpful and kind to help us look. Already did asRead More you suggested. I already spoke with the police station and the military. It's understandable that someone wouldn't know what to do with it if found and that's why my friend, in hopes to assisting me, has posted these and others around.
Karen Buehler June 12, 2013 at 08:14 am
Also ribbon cutting of the new trail constructed by Boy Scouts lead by Ross as part of his EagleRead More Project. Project was supervised by Karen Buehler from Crescenta Valley Trail Crew who has been restoring trails at Deukmejian Wilderness Park.
Bambi Leigh June 12, 2013 at 11:37 am
Paul, thanks for the wonderful coverage, as well as for your fantastic support throughout the year.Read More We are planning more events for the summer, including docent-led hikes. Details will be posted here on Patch, or go to http://www.arroyosfoothills.org/rosemont/ for more information.
Robin Collins June 6, 2013 at 03:03 pm
The address is 2409 Honolulu Avenue, next to White's Art Gallery. Parking in the public lot atRead More Honolulu and Wickham Way, as well as street parking.
Robin Collins June 6, 2013 at 03:09 pm
Correction: Address is 2406 Honolulu Avenue. Community event sponsored by Christian Science church.Read More Speaker was an Army chaplain for 30 years, and has a lifetime of experience in healing hearts, minds and bodies through prayer.
Samantha Keenan Class Of 2013
ROBERT E. FISHBACK June 11, 2013 at 08:28 pm
I can see why you are proud of her; what a beautiful young lady; this is America's hope for theRead More future. You have something the wealthy would give it all for.....YOUTH :)
Cindy June 11, 2013 at 08:34 pm
Robert, Thanks so much. Yes I agree with you 110%. I feel so very lucky! :)
Dan Abendschein (Editor) June 3, 2013 at 10:43 am
Hey Robert, If you are having technical troubles posting I can try and help. You can email me atRead More dan.abendschein@patch.com.
chuck weiss May 30, 2013 at 09:31 pm
A little inappropriate to have to read if those happened to be your cats.
ROBERT E. FISHBACK May 23, 2013 at 02:39 pm
I can well empathsize with your loss. First thing, can you remember taking it off anywhere? DidRead More you wash your hands anywhere, soap makes fingers slippery. Did it fit well or was it a little loose? Running makes the arms swing. Strange as it may seem, it may still be in or on your own property. There are still honest people, call the desk of every business you went to. Also, call every pawn shop in your area and report. Good luck. If its any comfort, I found a diamond studded tie tack when I gazed at the soil in my garden and saw it. Keep us posted. b
lmd6280 May 24, 2013 at 06:45 am
Thank you so much. I definitely should not have been wearing it... it has been loose for a coupleRead More of years now. I'm hoping that it is on my property otherwise I am at the grace of good honest people... Thank you for your suggestions and I have filed a lost property report and I will definitely call the local pawn shops. Keeping it in perspective and at the end of the day it is just an object, but I'm definitely hoping that it finds its way back.
ROBERT E. FISHBACK May 25, 2013 at 03:21 pm
Loose for a couple of years....you have been dieting If you worked in your yard on thatRead More day...rent or get a metal detector.
"Your Neighborhood Spa, Since 1996"
Janelle Palmer Williams May 17, 2013 at 12:34 pm
Uptown Face and Body Care...doing it right since 1996. I love this place! Congratulations on yourRead More continued success, and thank you for your little oasis in Montrose, where I enter feeling knotty and stressed out and leave wondering what my problem was! Much love!
Trissie Badger May 21, 2013 at 09:59 am
I feel bad that teachers are having to pull money out of their own pockets, I wonder whateverRead More happened to the lottery money that was supposed to go to schools? I am a volunteer for an organization that offers free drug education kits to any teacher with booklets on the various harmful drugs . Educators play a vital role for our children and in society and should be supported in any way possible. Any who might be interested, e-mail me at tbadger2000@yahoo.com.