
A STATE OF DESTRUCTION: Days after the Freeway Complex fire tore through, Park Superintendent John Rowe walks amid the blackened landscape at Chino Hills State Park, where more than 95% of 14,100 acres was incinerated.
Source of this article - Los Angeles Times, November 29, 2008
Residents and park officials mourn the loss after more than 95% of the 14,100 acres burned in the Freeway Complex fire, leaving little but a blackened landscape behind.David Kelly
![]() A STATE OF DESTRUCTION: Days after the Freeway Complex fire tore through, Park Superintendent John Rowe walks amid the blackened landscape at Chino Hills State Park, where more than 95% of 14,100 acres was incinerated. |
For more than 20 years, Chino Hills State Park has stood as an island of
wilderness circled by freeways and untrammeled development. Swaying grasslands
and remote canyons offered solitude to hikers and bikers. Rare plants and
wildlife flourished.
That all changed recently when a tidal wave of wind
and fire swept through, with flames shooting 80 feet into the sky. More than 95%
of the park's 14,100 acres -- including old oaks, stately sycamores, bridges,
rabbits and grasslands -- were incinerated, leaving little but ash
behind.
The breadth of destruction has left many numb.
"I don't
know if I even want to go in yet because the emotional impact would be too
great," said Claire Schlotterbeck, executive director of Hills for Everyone, a
nonprofit dedicated to protecting the Puente-Chino Hills natural environment
that helped create the park in 1984.
"It is just devastating," she said.
"There has never been a fire in these hills that consumed all these acres in one
fell swoop. It's just a moonscape."
The park will remain closed until it
can be cleared of debris.
The 31-mile-long tableau of undulating hills
and canyons touches Riverside, San Bernardino and Orange counties and is within
a half-hour's drive of 15 million people. It is part of an important wildlife
corridor that connects to the Santa Ana Mountains and is home to bobcats,
mountain lions, reptiles and 200 species of birds, including the threatened
least Bell's vireo.
Park Superintendent John Rowe watched the park
tragedy unfold shortly after the Freeway Complex fire began in Corona on Nov.
15.
![]() SIGN OF LIFE: A bird is spotted after blaze in the wildlife corridor that is home to 200 species of birds. |
"It took about 20 minutes to get from the point of origin to the
park," he said, as his truck bounced up Scully Ridge recently with nothing but
black scars of ash on either side. "Once it passed Green River, I knew we
couldn't save the park and the focus would be on structure
protection."
He hopped out with binoculars to scan the hills for signs of
life. Red-tailed hawks and turkey vultures wheeled tightly overhead. A rabbit
dashed for cover in a blackened thicket. There were few places left to hide.
Scavengers found easy pickings among the animal carcasses littering the
park.
Rowe walked across a landscape reduced to broad sheets of charcoal,
past skeletal remains of sycamore trees near Aliso Creek.
Some, he said,
will be left as wildlife habitat. Others are being evaluated by park service
foresters, who will decide if they should be removed. Small pockets of trees,
including the rare black walnut, escaped the fire along with some coastal
sage.
"You are within three of the most populous counties in the nation
here, but when you are down in these canyons you can't even tell you are in
Southern California," Rowe said, crunching along through cinders. "Stop and
imagine that this fire didn't happen. Look around you. You can't get this
anywhere else."
A yearning for nature and isolation may account for why
so many homes have sprung up around the park in recent years, closing in on it
from nearly every side.
![]() CAUTION: Park Superintendent John Rowe on a damaged footbridge. The park will stay closed until debris is cleared. |
"I look at this as the cumulative effect of
really bad land-use decisions. The park was there and cities and counties built
right up to the edge of it, leaving no buffer," Schlotterbeck said. "The park
has never started a fire, but the consequences of these land-use decisions were
borne by the park, the wildlife and the taxpayers."
She said a housing
project in Brea, with 165 homes, is planned for a ridge overlooking the
park.
"How ludicrous is it to put people in harm's way like that?" she
asked.
Fire isn't new to the park. One burned 3,000 acres five years ago,
and smaller ones have erupted from time to time. Though wildfires are part of
life in Southern California, they can cause permanent damage, scientists
say.
"Within Chino Hills State Park, and regionally, we are having fires
burn at shorter intervals than would occur naturally, and these habitats cannot
recover from repeated fires," said Ken Kietzer, environmental scientist for the
Inland Empire district of California State Parks. "Portions of the park have
burned about five years apart over the last 15 to 20 years. They can't recover
quickly enough."
The result, often, is an invasion of non-native plants.
Grasslands replace forests because trees don't have time to regrow.
The
park should burn about every 20 years, not every five, scientists
say.
Still, as denuded as it appears, that the park will recover is a
near certainty. Winter rains will allow seeds to sprout, reforestation will
occur and volunteers are already lining up to help rebuild trails. Erosion and
mudslides are serious threats, as are invasive plants, but other parks that have
faced similar situations have found ways to deal with them.
Griffith
Park, in a densely populated area of Los Angeles, was hit by fire in May
2007.
"We lost more than a quarter of our 4,000 acres," said Jane Kolb,
spokeswoman for the city of Los Angeles' Recreation and Parks Department. "The
hills were bare and the trees were gone."
![]() PASSING BY: A truck makes its way through the park, where winter rains will allow seeds to sprout. |
Helicopters dropped specialized
mulch to firm up hillsides and prevent erosion. An army of volunteers worked
Saturdays helping to reseed and replant burned areas. The Sierra Club joined in,
as did the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection and other
agencies. The city spent about $2.5 million on the effort, Kolb said.
"We
had to close many of the hiking and horse trails, but many have reopened," she
said. "You can still see where they burned."
Santiago Canyon in Orange
County burned last year but also has seen substantial recovery.
At Chino
Hills State Park, damage assessments are underway and foresters are scheduled to
start clearing dead trees Dec. 8.
Despite the damage, plenty of surviving
wildlife has been spotted.
"I actually saw a deer, a coyote, a handful of
bird species, a golden eagle, a California kingsnake and fresh bobcat tracks,"
Kietzer said. "It's a big disaster, but there is reason to be optimistic the
wildlife is adjusting to the fire." Still, he added, "Some will move out until
the park comes back."
In nearby Chino Hills, a few residents recently
gathered outside a locked park gate to examine the burned hillsides.
"I
find the park excruciatingly beautiful," Sally Mollett said. "It's as green as
can be, and you can see life as it was in there."
She turned to Rowe, the
park superintendent.
"Did the giant oak and sycamore down by the river
survive?" she asked.
He nodded.
Mollett's 11-year-old son, James,
and his classmate Jacob Hurd seemed concerned. The boys said they hope to do a
5th-grade science fair project on the park's restoration.
"It's just so
horrible to think of all the animals in there that died or have no homes," James
said. "I feel very sorry for them. Animals have feelings too."