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Sparked in the Santa Barbara foothills during a period of extreme heat, the Coyote Fire devastated 67,000 acres and claimed the life of a Klamath National Forest firefighter. The disaster stands as a regional turning point for its massive structural losses and the catastrophic debris flows that followed the denudation of 30,000 acres of steep watershed. Its legacy is defined by the first major local deployment of B-17 air tankers and a lasting controversy over federal fire suppression policies.
The blaze originated near Coyote Road and Mountain Drive when a defective muffler ignited parched grass. Initial suppression efforts by local and federal crews were thwarted by fierce Sundowner winds and high-voltage power lines that obstructed aerial maneuvers. The fire rapidly crested the Santa Ynez Mountains, invading the Santa Ynez River drainage and threatening the Paradise Road community. Tactical challenges were compounded by thousands of residents attempting to protect properties, which clogged narrow access routes and hindered pumper deployment.
On the fire's third day, a tragic wind shift at Romero Saddle overran a crew from Yreka, resulting in the death of John L. Patterson, Sr. and several narrow escapes. While a fortuitous wind change eventually spared the Painted Cave community from a planned tactical backfire, 94 homes across the front country were lost. The event marked an early milestone in aerial firefighting technology, with contract pilots like Howard Haradon flying converted World War II bombers at stall speeds through narrow, smoke-filled canyons to drop over 500,000 gallons of borate retardant.
The fire's aftermath proved as destructive as the flames. With roughly 30,000 acres of south-facing slopes stripped of vegetation, a heavy rainstorm on November 9, 1964, triggered 20-foot walls of mud and rock in Montecito and Cold Spring canyons. These debris flows swept away bridges and inundated the Lower Village, establishing a recurring hazard profile for the region. In the years following, the disaster sparked intense political friction between local rangeland associations advocating for controlled burns and a Forest Service policy that prioritized total fire suppression.
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