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1964 Post-Coyote Fire Debris Flows Strike Montecito and Santa Barbara ↳ Part of Series

Occurred Nov 9, 1964 | Added Feb 7, 2026 | Updated Feb 12, 2026
📍 Montecito, Cold Spring Canyon, and Santa Barbara, CA
Tags: Debris Flow Historical (Pre-2000) Recurring Burn Area South Coast
Inclusion Criteria: Post-Fire Hazard Event
At a Glance
📰 3 Sources
👥 6 People
Key individuals: Larry Gurrola, J. Rogers

Description

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.

🔗 Related Entries

Part of
📂 1964 Coyote Fire and Post-Fire Debris Flows
September 22, 1964

Sources (3)

Source: Santa Barbara County Fire Safe Council
Date: February 25, 2022
Read full article → https://sbfiresafecouncil.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/01/FINAL-REPORT-Fire-Flood-Landslide-Dam-History-FEB-25-2022.pdf
People Mentioned (5)
analyst 2
👤 Frank F. Flournoy secondary analyst
Santa Barbara County Surveyor at Santa Barbara County
Provided detailed technical observations of landslide dam formation and debris flow processes during the 1914 event. His editorial described the mechanism of temporary dams blocking channels and subsequent outbreak floods - key early documentation of the fire-flood cycle.
👤 James Stubchaer secondary analyst
Director at Santa Barbara County Flood Control District
Documented the 1969 post-Coyote Fire debris flows and compared them to the 1914 event. His 1972 report acknowledged that debris fills creek channels and causes out-of-channel flows, establishing patterns repeated in 2018.
Author 2
👤 Larry D. Gurrola primary Author
Consulting Geologist (Ph.D., P.G., C.E.G.) at Independent Consultant
Lead author of the comprehensive 2022 historical study documenting fire and flood history in Montecito. His research established the 1964 post-Coyote Fire debris flows as part of a documented pattern dating back to 1825.
👤 J. David Rogers primary Author
Consulting Geologist (Ph.D., P.E., P.G., C.E.G., C.H.G.) at Independent Consultant
Co-author of the 2022 historical study that documented the 1964-1969 post-Coyote Fire debris flow sequence. Contributed geological and engineering analysis of landslide dam hazards and outbreak flood mechanics.
Implementer 1
👤 Thomas T. Dinsmore secondary Implementer
Santa Barbara County Supervisor at Santa Barbara County Board of Supervisors
Led emergency response and debris removal operations during the 1926 and 1964 post-fire flood events. Directed crews to clear blockages and expressed concern that post-fire conditions would lead to greater runoff - establishing early understanding of fire-flood cycle.
Source: Santa Barbara Bucket Brigade
Date: January 1, 2022
Read full article → https://sbbucketbrigade.org/timeline/1964-coyote-fire-flood/
Source: Santa Barbara Independent News
Date: January 16, 2018
Read full article → https://www.independent.com/2018/01/16/deadly-montecito-debris-flow-was-rare-event-but-could-happen-again/
People Mentioned (1)
analyst 1
👤 Ed Keller secondary analyst
Professor of Earth Science at UC Santa Barbara
Provided expert analysis connecting the 1964 post-Coyote Fire debris flows to the 2018 post-Thomas Fire event. Explained the geological vulnerability of burned watersheds and the potential for recurring debris flows in the same watersheds.
📋

Why This Entry Is Included

Post-Fire Hazard Event
POST_FIRE_HAZARD
definitive
A debris flow, mudslide, flood, erosion event, or other secondary hazard directly caused by or significantly worsened by a preceding wildfire's destruction of vegetation and soil stability.
Curator's Justification
This event precisely matches the criterion definition: 'A debris flow, mudslide, flood, erosion event, or other secondary hazard directly caused by or significantly worsened by a preceding wildfire's destruction of vegetation and soil stability.' The Gurrola & Rogers study explicitly states: 'The denuded hillsides left by the fire offered no resistance to erosion.' The September 1964 Coyote Fire directly caused the November 1964 debris flows by destroying watershed vegetation. The criterion's own examples include 'Montecito debris flow kills 23 people on Thomas Fire burn scar (January 2018)' which is the exact historical parallel - both are post-fire debris flows in Montecito on recently burned watersheds.

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