zaca fire | Santa Ynez Valley Star https://santaynezvalleystar.com The only source for all news about the Santa Ynez Valley - local fresh news and lifestyle Mon, 24 Sep 2018 23:42:51 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.2 https://santaynezvalleystar.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/03/cropped-SYVS-Circle-Logo-32x32.jpg zaca fire | Santa Ynez Valley Star https://santaynezvalleystar.com 32 32 195921705 Fire Management lecture schedule for Thursday, Sept. 27 https://santaynezvalleystar.com/fire-management-lecture-schedule-for-thursday-sept-27/ Mon, 24 Sep 2018 23:42:51 +0000 https://santaynezvalleystar.com/?p=7106 Staff Report The Santa Ynez Valley Natural History Society and Solvang Library are hosting a talk about wildfire and regional biodiversity by distinguished herpetologist Samuel Sweet. This free program, titled “Fire Management and the Future of Southern California’s Sky Islands,” will be held on Thursday, September 27, 7:00 p.m. at the Solvang Library, located at […]

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Staff Report

The Santa Ynez Valley Natural History Society and Solvang Library are hosting a talk about wildfire and regional biodiversity by distinguished herpetologist Samuel Sweet. This free program, titled “Fire Management and the Future of Southern California’s Sky Islands,” will be held on Thursday, September 27, 7:00 p.m. at the Solvang Library, located at 1745 Mission Drive.

Southwestern California contains a number of “sky islands,” which are ridge lines and mountaintops that trap moisture and still provide conditions that support isolated relict coniferous forests and plant communities that are rich in animal life. In our immediate area, small examples of sky island habitat can be found on Figueroa Mountain and Ranger Peak. Direct evidence of fires was actually lacking in these sites until recently, but changes in fire origins and fire management in the last decade or so have created a crisis whereby some of California’s most spectacular sky islands have been lost, and the remainder are under severe threat.

A decade after the catastrophic Day and Zaca fires, conifers have completely failed to recruit because conditions are now too hot and dry, and these sites will continue as chaparral for thousands of years until the next glacial cycle. This lecture will focus on the few remaining sky islands to illustrate what is being lost. The talk will also examine how current fire-management strategies could be modified in order to better protect these imperiled places.

Dr. Samuel Sweet is a Professor at UCSB’s Department of Ecology, Evolution and Marine Biology. His research focus is on distributional ecology and systematics of western North American and Australian amphibians and reptiles.

For more information about the Santa Ynez Valley Natural History Society and its fall 2018 schedule of lectures and field trips, please visit www.syvnature.org.

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Rey Fire increases to more than 29,000 acres https://santaynezvalleystar.com/rey-fire-increases-to-more-than-29000-acres/ Tue, 23 Aug 2016 17:29:53 +0000 https://santaynezvalleystar.com/?p=828 The Rey Fire continues to grow to 29,664 acres and is at 30 percent containment as of Tuesday morning, according to fire officials.  The update from the Los Padres National Forest Service read that the fire was active, spreading primarily to the east and north. The fire has reached the Zaca Fire scar in the […]

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The Rey Fire continues to grow to 29,664 acres and is at 30 percent containment as of Tuesday morning, according to fire officials.  The update from the Los Padres National Forest Service read that the fire was active, spreading primarily to the east and north.

The fire has reached the Zaca Fire scar in the northeast which is slowing growth. On the east side, firefighters are using existing infrastructure (roads and old dozer line) to construct containment lines near Mono Creek, according to InciWeb.

Expect to see smoke and ashfall in the Santa Ynez Valley, Santa Barbara, Montecito and Carpenteria for the next couple of days as the fire grows east/northeast towards the Dick Smith Wilderness.

East Camino Cielo Road will be closed to all traffic at the junctions of Painted Cave Road and Gibralter Road for the safety of firefighter personnel and equipment movement. An evacuation order remains in effect for the Paradise Road recreation areas, parts of Stagecoach Road and the Los Prietos Boys Camp, according to officials.

The Rey Fire fire started Thursday afternoon just before 3 p.m. near the White Rock Campgrounds, said Mike Eliason of Santa Barbara County Fire.

Anyone who needs assistance evacuating animals are to call Santa Barbara County Animal Services at (805) 681-4332.

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