California observatory again under threat from Bobcat fire; more crews move in to defend

Tribune Content Agency

LOS ANGELES — Fire crews remain in battle mode as efforts to save the Mount Wilson Observatory from the raging Bobcat fire continue.

Days after officials announced that firefighters had beaten back advancing flames and the 116-year-old structure was safe, firefighters are battling flare-ups at the top of the mountain.

“Just when I thought the danger was over — it wasn’t,” Thomas Meneghi, the observatory’s executive director, said Monday. “As I was leaving (Sunday), eight more strike units were rumbling up the road.”

It was the second time in a little over a decade that the gleaming white domed observatory and its companion installations — including the towers that serve broadcast outlets and a variety of law enforcement and national security functions — have faced imminent threat of destruction from wildfire. In 2009, crews battled the Station fire from both the ground and the sky over several days.

The Bobcat fire, which ignited Sept. 6, has grown to more than 105,000 acres — one of Los Angeles County’s largest blazes ever — and remains at 15% containment, according to the U.S. Forest Service.

Firefighters have already used half of a 530,000-gallon water tank on the observatory grounds in their nearly weeklong battle against the blaze, Meneghi said. Crews are working to refill the tank and keep water pressure strong.

Officials from the Forest Service said Mount Wilson remains a top priority, noting that “multiple, multiple resources” have been dedicated to keeping the flames at bay.

“We are getting winds out of the east, so people are seeing flare-ups there,” U.S. Forest Service spokesman Larry Smith said Monday. “But there are no new evacuations (around Mount Wilson). There’s nothing to be concerned about.”

Fire crews were also focusing Monday on the Antelope Valley, where the massive blaze continues to loom large after forcing evacuations and charring multiple homes. The National Weather Service said fire weather conditions, including heat, dryness and gusty winds, could feed the flames and create the “potential for rapid growth and extreme fire behavior.”

“Out by the Bobcat fire, it’s still fairly warm and dry, and there will be afternoon and evening gusts of winds,” meteorologist David Sweet said from the weather service’s station in Oxnard. “And that’s the concern right there: dryness and gusty winds.”

Isolated wind gusts could reach as high as 40 mph, Sweet said. The winds will likely continue for the rest of the week.

Residents in the Juniper Hills area of the Antelope Valley anxiously awaited updates on their homes after evacuation orders last week.

“We kept watching the fire maps closely, and we knew that it was in our area,” said Juniper Hills resident Bridget Lensing, who evacuated her family’s home Thursday. “We were hoping and praying somehow our home would be spared.”

Lensing’s parents bought their Cima Mesa home in the 1980s, and both she and her brother were raised there. She said that her family rushed to spray the whole property with water before evacuating, and that they spent an “agonizing” 48 hours away from the area before returning to find much of their neighborhood destroyed.

“All the homes on our street were gone,” Lensing said. “Everything was dust beside the chimneys.”

Lensing’s house was the only one on the street to survive, she said, although it was apparent that flames had swept through the property. Her closest neighbor’s home of 50 years burned in the blaze.

“We feel so, so sorry for them,” she said. “But they want to rebuild. … Juniper Hills is so strong.”

The Bobcat fire is one of six major blazes currently prioritized by the state, Gov. Gavin Newsom said Monday during a news briefing. The other fires are the August Complex, the North Complex, the Creek fire, the El Dorado fire and the Snow fire.

“We’re putting all the resources we possibly can on all these complexes,” Newsom said, “but focusing, as we should, on that Bobcat fire.”

Calling this year a “historic” fire season, the governor said 19,000 firefighters are battling 27 blazes statewide. Among those, 26 people have died, including three firefighters, and 6,400 structures have been destroyed.

“The 26 fatalities and 6,400 structures are based on what we have seen, what we have witnessed,” he said, noting that “by no stretch of the imagination” is that number the extent of potential destruction and death from the fires.

Fifteen mutual-aid states are helping with firefighting efforts statewide, Newsom said, and 3.6 million acres have burned.

For weeks, firefighters on the Bobcat fire have been hindered by steep, rocky terrain within the Angeles National Forest, which made it difficult for large mechanical equipment to reach several front lines of the blaze.

The fire’s creep into the Antelope Valley, fed by low-lying desert shrubbery, also presents new challenges.

“The more variables you have, the more complex it becomes,” said Smith, the Forest Service spokesman. “It’s much less terrain-influenced there. Now it’s a fuel-driven fire.”

Grasses, sage and brush are contributing to the fire’s movement through the valley, Smith said, but he noted that the flatter terrain is allowing for more mechanized equipment, such as bulldozers, to create containment lines.

A total of 4,000 people have been evacuated and 6,000 structures are threatened by the blaze, he said.

Air quality continues to suffer because of the fire. Officials issued a smoke advisory for a swath of Southern California through Monday afternoon.

While forecasts show good or moderate air quality is expected for much of the Southland throughout the day, pollutants could reach levels considered unhealthy for sensitive groups and individuals in the eastern San Gabriel Valley, areas in and around the San Gabriel Mountains and parts of the Inland Empire.

Given the forecast, Los Angeles County health officials are urging residents with heart disease, asthma or other respiratory diseases to minimize their time outdoors.

As of Monday, roughly 1,700 personnel have been assigned to the Bobcat fire, Smith said, including several firefighters who have arrived from across the country to battle the insatiable blaze.

“Is there a fatigue level? Absolutely,” Smith said, “but firefighters are always optimistic. I never go into a fight with the intent to lose.”

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(Times staff writer Luke Money contributed to this report.)

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MANDATORY EVACUATION ORDERS:

Juniper Hills, Devil’s Punchbowl and Paradise Springs

Crystal Lake, the East Fork of the San Gabriel River and Camp Williams

Residences along Angeles Crest Highway between Angeles Forest Highway and Highway 39

South of Highway 138, north of Big Rock Creek, east of 87th Street East and west of Largo Vista Road

South of 138th Street East, north of Big Pine Highway and Highway 2, east of Largo Vista Road and west of 263rd Street East

South of Highway 138, north of East Avenue W-14, east of 155th Street East and west of 165th Street East.

UNDER EVACUATION WARNINGS:

City of Pasadena

Unincorporated communities of Altadena and Wrightwood

South of Pearblossom Highway, east and north of Angeles Forest Highway, north and west of Mt. Emma Road, east and south of Highway 122 and west of Chesebro Road

South of Highway 2, north of Blue Ridge Truck Trail, east of Highway 39 and west of the Los Angeles County border

South of Avenue U-8, north of East Avenue W-14, east of 121st Street East and west of 155th Street East

South of Pearblossom Highway, south and east of Pearblossom Highway, north and west of Mt. Emma Road, north and east of Angeles Forest Highway and west of Chesebro Road

South of Mt. Emma Road, north of Upper Big Tujunga Canyon Road, east of Angeles Forest Highway and west of Pacifico Mountain

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