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Brief Summary:
On November 9, 1964, heavy rainfall exceeding 1.15 inches triggered catastrophic debris flows through Montecito and Santa Barbara's Cold Spring, Hot Springs, Montecito, and San Ysidro creek drainages, just over one month after the Coyote Fire was contained. Eyewitnesses reported 20-foot walls of mud, rocks, and logs moving at 15 miles per hour down denuded canyon slopes. The event established the fire-flood cycle pattern that would repeat with the Thomas Fire in 2017-2018.
Detailed Summary:
The September 1964 Coyote Fire burned vegetation across steep watersheds above Montecito and Santa Barbara, leaving hillsides vulnerable to erosion. When intense rainfall struck on November 9, 1964, the destabilized slopes generated debris flows that overwhelmed creek channels and infrastructure throughout the region.
In Cold Spring Canyon, witnesses described towering walls of debris moving rapidly downslope. Montecito Creek experienced critical blockage when debris jammed beneath the Hot Springs Road bridge, diverting the flow westward down Hot Springs and Olive Mill roads into Montecito's Lower Village commercial district. The debris-laden floodwaters damaged buildings, crossed the highway overpass, and inundated streets south of Highway 101. Similar impacts occurred across all four affected creek systems as channels filled with boulders, logs, and mud.
The 1964 event marked the beginning of a documented multi-year hazard period on the Coyote Fire burn scar. Additional debris flows struck the same watersheds in 1967 and early 1969, demonstrating the prolonged vulnerability of fire-affected terrain. This fire-followed-by-flood sequence would later be recognized as a recurring pattern in Santa Barbara County, culminating in the deadly January 2018 Montecito debris flow that followed the Thomas Fire and killed 23 people in strikingly similar circumstances.
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