
The air seems to be a bit clearer tonight, both here in Chula Vista and out in Lawson Valley. A few minutes ago I was out walking our dogs, and a flight of four (I think) Sea Stallion helicopters – huge, heavy-lifting military helicopters – flew by a mile or so away, clearly visible through the smoky haze. It looked like they were returning to the Coronado Naval Air Station from the direction of the Harris Fire. The sight of them was immensely cheering…

A couple of hours ago I called 211 to find out if Lawson Valley was ready for “repopulation” (the term many local officials are using to describe letting people go back home – seems like a strange and perhaps ill-advised turn of phrase). A very polite, sympathetic, and well-connected young lady sadly informed me that not only was Lawson Valley not ready for repopulation, it had just come under mandatory evacuation order this very morning, and law enforcement was having trouble getting everyone out of there. Knowing some of my neighbors, this is very easy to believe.

Until last night, all the smoke from the fires has been blown by the Santa Ana winds coming out of the northeast at an average of 25 or 30 miles per hour. The smoke plume extended for hundreds of miles out to sea. Now that the winds have turned around into their normal pattern of onshore winds, all that smoke out over the ocean is blowing back toward land. Some of it is coming right back to us, some to the north and south of us. I'm sure this “blow-back” is a major part of the haze visible here.

After the Cedar Fire, when immediate threat to human life was over, we (San Diegans, I mean) started assessing the damage to our environment and our wildlife. That was four years ago, and we've learned much watching the flora and fauna start its recovery. Some things have surprised us positively, such as the oak trees that we thought were dead and gone – they've sprouted from deep within their branches. They're survivors. Other things are going to take much longer, especially the large conifers like the beautiful Ponderosa pines of our higher mountains. The wildlife has only just begun to return; we've seen only a few deer up in Cuyamaca, and I've read that the mountain lion population is still a tiny fraction of what it used to be. This year's fires have burned even more territory. Even worse, I suspect, is that much of the remaining unburned area has gone up – not all of it, mind you, but a good fraction of it. Or to say the same thing in a different way: San Diego County's backcountry will look much different in the next decade or two than it has since I moved here in 1974. I'll miss it, especially the large conifer forests. I got to having these sad thoughts today as I looked at the map of the fire burning on Palomar Mountain, where the best stands of Ponderosa I know were. If the satellite imagery is accurate, most of those pines are now charcoal…
I am living at Steele Canyon High School for the week, though normally within a mile of you. The news was bleak this morning as things were headed our way. But I recently talked to a fireman that had been in our area today. He appreciated the fact that the Trading Post is open and he bought a coke there. They are drawing the line there and at Four Corners. The map of what has burned is posted here and they are handing out address lists of homes damaged or destroyed, though not complete yet. Found animals are being posted as well. They think we will be here for a few more days. I hope not, but the news is good tonight.
ReplyDelete