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Jesusita Fire Burns 8,733 Acres, Destroys 80 Homes Above Santa Barbara 📂 Entry Series

Occurred May 5, 2009 | Added Feb 7, 2026 | Updated Feb 10, 2026
📍 Jesusita Trail area, Mission Canyon, Santa Barbara, CA
✓ Stable
Arson & Fire Investigation CAL FIRE Climate & Fire Weather Community Preparedness Evacuation Santa Barbara City Fire SB County Fire Department South Coast U.S. Forest Service Wildfire Wildland-Urban Interface
📰 9 Sources
👥 7 People

Description

  • Acreage: 8,733 acres
  • Ignition Date: May 5, 2009, at approximately 1:40 p.m.
  • Containment Date: May 20, 2009
  • Cause: Unattended hot equipment from unpermitted trail clearing
  • Structures Lost: 80 homes, 79 outbuildings and commercial properties
  • Injuries/Fatalities: 32 firefighter injuries, 0 fatalities

The Jesusita Fire began on the afternoon of May 5, 2009, in the foothills above Santa Barbara and burned for over two weeks. Ignited by contractors using a brush-cutter during unpermitted trail maintenance, the fire was driven by strong Sundowner winds, leading to the destruction of 159 structures and forcing widespread evacuations. The incident resulted in significant legal action against both the contractors responsible for the ignition and the manufacturer of their equipment.

The fire started along the Jesusita Trail when contractors Craig Ilenstine and Dana Larsen left hot machinery unattended in dry vegetation. Fueled by powerful evening winds, the blaze spread rapidly into San Roque and Mission Canyons, threatening thousands of homes. The fire's progression was erratic, pushing west toward Highway 154 and east toward Montecito, burning into scars from the 1990 Painted Cave Fire and the 2008 Tea Fire.

The emergency response was massive, ultimately involving 4,543 firefighters and costing an estimated $19.5 million. Mandatory evacuation orders were issued for nearly 6,000 properties, affecting approximately 15,000 people, while tens of thousands more were placed under evacuation warnings. In addition to the homes lost, the Santa Barbara Botanic Garden suffered significant damage.

Following an investigation, Ilenstine and Larsen were charged with a misdemeanor for operating equipment without a permit. In July 2010, they pleaded no contest and received sentences of community service, probation, and a fine. In a separate civil action, dozens of homeowners sued Stihl, the manufacturer of the brush-cutting tool, alleging it failed to warn that its metal blades could spark. Stihl settled the lawsuit in 2013 for an undisclosed amount. Occurring just six months after the Tea Fire, the Jesusita Fire reinforced concerns about Santa Barbara's wildfire vulnerability and prompted renewed efforts in community preparedness and building safety standards.

🔗 Related Entries

Entries in this series (1)

Sources (9)

Engilish Wikipedia • Nov 20, 2025
9,159 wildfires were active in the US state of California during 2009. The fires burned more than 422,147 acres (660 mi2; 1,708 km2) of land from early February through late November, due to Red Flag conditions, destroying hundreds of structures, injuring 134 people, and killing four. The wildfires also caused at least US$134.48 million in damage. Although the fires burned many different regions of California in August, the month was especially notable for several very large fires which burned in Southern California, despite being outside of the normal fire season for that region. The Station Fire, north of Los Angeles, was the largest and deadliest of these wildfires. It began in late August, and resulted in the devastation of 160,577 acres (251 mi2; 650 km2) of land as well as the death of two firefighters. Another large fire was the La Brea Fire, which burned nearly 90,000 acres (141 mi2; 364 km2) in Santa Barbara County earlier in the month. A state of emergency was also declared for the 7,800-acre (12 mi2; 32 km2) Lockheed Fire in Santa Cruz County, to the north.
Edhat (Santa Barbara) • May 5, 2024
Anniversary retrospective with damage statistics and community impact of the 2009 Jesusita Fire.
Engilish Wikipedia • Jan 1, 2024
Overview of fire cause, acreage, structural losses, evacuations, and suppression costs.
Santa Barbara Bucket Brigade • Jan 1, 2022
Timeline entry with cause, structural losses, and evacuee numbers for the Jesusita Fire.
Santa Barbara Independent News • Sep 5, 2009
The investigation notes have been given to the District Attorney to be used in determining any possible culpability.
Santa Barbara Independent News • May 9, 2009
Real-time factual summary of acreage, containment, evacuations, and structure damage during the Jesusita Fire.
Other • May 7, 2009
Firefighters struggled Friday to get ahead of a raging wildfire that was moving dangerously close to heavily populated areas in this idyllic coastal city and had forced the evacuation of an estimated 30,000 residents. Neighborhoods of multimillion dollar mansions stood like ghost towns, bathed in the eerie orange glow cast by the nearby blaze.
Other • May 5, 2009

People Linked (7)

Key individuals: Craig Ilenstine, Dana Larsen, Tom Franklin, Gregg Patronyk, Pedro Nava
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📋 Why This Entry Is Included

Wildfire Event
WILDFIRE_EVENT
A wildfire or brush fire in Santa Barbara County that resulted in significant acreage burned, structures damaged or destroyed, evacuations ordered, injuries, fatalities, or required multi-agency response. Includes named fires and significant unnamed incidents.
Curator's Justification
The Jesusita Fire was a significant wildfire that burned 8,733 acres, destroyed 80 homes and 79 other structures, prompted the evacuation of thousands of residents, and required a massive multi-agency response. This squarely meets all conditions of the WILDFIRE_EVENT criterion.

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