Still burning
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Deepa Bharath
It was a sight that was branded on George Pearce’s memory forever.
The Newport Beach Fire battalion chief remembers that day exactly
10 years ago like it was yesterday.
He remembers feeling helpless. And terribly frustrated.
He remembers standing on the hillside as he watched million-dollar
homes drop like cardboard dollhouses as bright orange flames raged
across the scenic landscape.
The Laguna Beach fire of 1993, still remembered as the worst fire
in the county’s history, gutted more than 300 homes, charred about
65,000 acres and caused hundreds of millions of dollars in damages.
And Pearce, like 1,000 other firefighters, was standing and
watching, burning inside.
“We saw one house after another light up and fall to the ground,”
he said. “We weren’t able to get the engines up there. There was not
enough water supply. There was simply nothing we could do.”
The fire burned out of control for about a day, driving families
out of their homes as they hugged their families and their most
precious belongings. Miraculously, no lives were lost. But 14
firefighters and nine other people were injured.
The blaze, which broke out at about noon on Oct. 27, 1993,
swallowed about 313 homes, including 60 in affluent Emerald Bay and
100 in El Morro. The fire also burned several homes in Newport Coast,
which was part of the county at the time.
Every single firefighter who worked in Newport Beach at the time
was in Laguna Beach on that day at one time or the other, Pearce
said.
The conflagration spread faster than anyone could have ever
imagined and was soon lapping against Newport Coast Drive,
threatening to invade Corona del Mar, he said.
Several residents were either evacuated or were packed and ready
to leave their homes when the winds died down and the raging fire was
quelled.
Dave Nielsen lived close to Buck Gully at the time. He was surfing
with friends in Newport when the fire broke out.
“We saw the smoke and thought someone was burning trash,” he said.
But when he got home, he saw neighbors loading up U-Haul trucks.
“It was a mess,” he said. “Emerald Bay was on fire. Some of my
friends there lost their homes. They couldn’t get to Laguna because
Coast Highway was blocked.”
So they left Newport Harbor on a boat, docked it off Main Beach
and then swam ashore to their homes, Nielsen said.
He and his family evacuated and stayed at his in-laws’ home in
West Newport for the night.
“I heard firefighters say that if the fire hit Buck Gully, it
would go off like a fuse,” Nielsen said. “I stayed back for a while,
hosed off the roof and even loaded up my surfboards and guitars in
the car.”
Former City Councilman Dennis O’Neil recalls the fire as “probably
the most traumatic and frightening experience of my life.”
“Our house backs up to the Pelican Hill Golf Course,” he said.
“And Newport Coast Drive was pretty much acting as a wall between us
and the fire. We could see the fire on the ridge line, and it was
extremely threatening.”
They packed up and prepared to leave their home when the fire was
brought under control, O’Neil said.
The fires raging last week in the Inland Valley “brought back
memories,” he said.
“It seems like [the Laguna fire] happened yesterday,” O’Neil said.
“It puts the fear into your heart and soul that never leaves you
forever. Losing your home and your possessions is one of the worst
things that can happen to anyone.”
The city is better prepared to face a similar situation now than
it was 10 years ago, Pearce said.
“We have better understanding between the agencies,” he said.
Buck Gully still remains a concern because of homes that still
have wood shingles in them, Pearce said. Newport Coast too constantly
faces the threat of brush fires, he said.
The Laguna fire was unquestionably the fieriest fire he’s ever
seen in his 30 years as a firefighter, Pearce said.
“It lasted about a day,” he said. “But it was truly overwhelming.”
* DEEPA BHARATH covers public safety and courts. She may be
reached at (949) 574-4226 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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