Extinguishing the flames
Deirdre Newman
The senior bus picked up Blanche Fisher from her home on Aviemore
Terrace at 1:15 p.m. so she could perform some errands. When it
picked her up later that afternoon, the driver delivered her a
shocking message.
“He said, ‘Blanche, I think your house is on fire,’” Fisher said.
When she arrived home, her house was still standing, but thick
billows of smoke engulfed her neighborhood.
The fire, which broke out around 2:30 p.m. in Talbert Regional
Park -- county-owned land on the border of Costa Mesa and Huntington
Beach -- burnt about 25 acres, sending ripples of fear through Fisher
and her neighbors in the process. As they stood on the Terrace bluffs
and watched warily, the erratic blaze kept them guessing as it
hopscotched haphazardly through the park.
“It’s driven by the wind,” said Costa Mesa Fire Chief Jim Ellis,
who was directing the crews on scene. “That’s why it hops and jumps
around.”
The fire, which Ellis said began near the power lines midway
between Victoria Street and Coast Highway, grew quickly because of
the dry brush in the park. Although there were a couple of small
fires in the park on the Fourth of July, they were extinguished
before they mushroomed to the magnitude of Tuesday’s fire, Ellis
said.
While there were reports of children on bicycles in the area
before the fire started, Ellis said he had no concrete evidence of
how the park became ablaze. The area is popular with bicyclists of
all ages for the trails bordering the park and its ramps for riding
BMX bikes.
Costa Mesa fire crews arrived on the scene first -- six started
attacking the fire immediately while two drove up to the homes on the
bluff and stood watch in case it climbed up the hill.
Soon four Orange County units and a county helicopter arrived to
battle the blaze. Although two more helicopters had been requested,
they still hadn’t arrived two hours into the fire.
Ellis said access and water supply were the two biggest challenges
facing the firefighters. The ground crews used shovels, picks and
axes to clear the dense brush as blazes would be nearly extinguished
in one spot only to spark up in others.
While the helicopter used water from a marsh area near the Santa
Ana River next to the park, getting it to its desired target proved
daunting, Ellis said.
“Even though we’re surrounded by water, it’s hard to get it
there,” Ellis said.
Fortunately, the crews were able to contain the blaze to the flat
area of the park, while the smoke, blowing northeast, continued to
menace the residents of the Terrace homes.
It took crews about 3 1/2 hours to get the fire under control,
said Battalion Chief Keith Fujimoto. At 8 p.m. there were still
roughly 40 people on scene doing mop-up work, Fujimoto added.
Even though the fire did not directly threaten the residences on
the other side of Victoria Street, the smoke sent ashes through the
front door of Gary Hicks’ condo. Hicks was riveted by the Dodger game
on TV but the ashes distracted him enough to jump on his bike and
race down to the trail to watch the fire’s progress.
“At first, I thought it was a controlled fire,” Hicks said. “But
then, it was like a big wall of fire.”
Despite the prevalence of dry brush in the park, controlled burns
are not allowed in the area because of endangered species, Ellis
said.
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