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2024 Lake Fire

Occurred Jul 5, 2024 | Added Feb 7, 2026 | Updated Feb 13, 2026
📍 Figueroa Mountain Road, near Zaca Lake, north of Los Olivos, Santa Barbara County, CA
Tags: CAL FIRE Climate & Fire Weather Evacuation Insurance Recurring Burn Area Santa Ynez Valley SB County Fire Department U.S. Forest Service Wildfire
Inclusion Criteria: Wildfire Event
At a Glance
📰 5 Sources
👥 3 People

Description

  • Acreage: 38,664
  • Ignition: July 5, 2024, at 3:48 PM (Cause under investigation)
  • Containment: August 4, 2024
  • Structures Destroyed: Unknown
  • Injuries/Fatalities: 4 minor firefighter injuries
  • Lead Agency: U.S. Forest Service (Los Padres National Forest)

Igniting July 5, 2024, during a severe heatwave, the Lake Fire consumed 38,664 acres of rugged backcountry in the San Rafael Mountains, becoming Santa Barbara County's largest wildfire since the 2017 Thomas Fire. The blaze forced the evacuation of 1,500 residents and threatened communities in the Santa Ynez Valley before its containment a month later. Beyond physical damage, the event notably exacerbated the region's ongoing homeowner insurance availability crisis.

The fire erupted near Figueroa Mountain Road under extreme weather conditions, including temperatures of 104 degrees and single-digit relative humidity. It spread rapidly through grass, brush, and oak timber that had not burned in over three decades, largely within the footprint of the 1993 Marre Fire. Driven by the conditions and burning through the steep, inaccessible terrain north of Los Olivos, the fire more than doubled in size within its first 24 hours.

A multi-agency force of more than 2,400 personnel was deployed to combat the blaze. Ten air tankers and numerous helicopters supported ground crews in building containment lines and protecting structures. As the fire advanced, Sheriff's deputies and Search and Rescue teams conducted extensive door-to-door notifications, resulting in evacuation orders for 1,500 people and warnings for an additional 1,200.

By the time the fire was fully contained in early August, four firefighters had sustained minor injuries, but no primary residential or commercial structures were reported lost. The fire's most persistent impact was economic, as it intensified financial anxieties in the Santa Ynez Valley, where many residents already faced escalating insurance premiums and non-renewals.

Following containment, U.S. Forest Service crews remained on the fire line for several weeks conducting suppression repair. This work included constructing water bars and restoring hand and dozer lines to mitigate the risk of post-fire erosion and debris flows in the burn scar.

Sources (5)

Source: Santa Barbara Independent News
Date: July 10, 2024
Read full article → https://www.independent.com/2024/07/10/day-six-of-lake-fire-nearly-29000-acres-burned-1500-people-evacuated/
People Mentioned (1)
analyst 1
👤 Daniel Michael secondary analyst
Regional Fire Planner at U.S. Forest Service
Provided expert analysis on fire behavior, explaining how embers and terrain features in the San Rafael Mountains were driving fire growth.
Source: Santa Barbara Independent News
Date: July 6, 2024
Read full article → https://www.independent.com/2024/07/06/lake-fire-more-than-doubles-in-size-in-santa-barbara-backcounty/
People Mentioned (2)
Facilitator 1
👤 Sarah Aguilar secondary Facilitator
Director at Santa Barbara County Animal Services
Managed the logistical challenge of evacuating large animals, including ostriches and horses, from the evacuation zone.
Quoted 1
👤 Scott Safechuck secondary Quoted
Public Information Officer / Captain at Santa Barbara County Fire Department
Served as the primary spokesperson for the County Fire Department, issuing real-time updates on containment and acreage.
📋

Why This Entry Is Included

Wildfire Event
WILDFIRE_EVENT
definitive
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 event is a major wildfire that burned 38,664 acres, required a multi-agency response of over 2,400 personnel, and forced the evacuation of 1,500 people. This fits the core definition of the criterion precisely.

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