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2017 Whittier Fire: Youth Camp Destruction and Circle V Ranch Rescue

Occurred Jul 8, 2017 | Added Feb 7, 2026 | Updated Feb 11, 2026
📍 Lake Cachuma, Santa Ynez Mountains, Santa Barbara County, CA
Tags: Climate & Fire Weather Debris Flow Evacuation Recovery & Rebuilding Recurring Burn Area Santa Ynez Valley SB County Fire Department U.S. Forest Service Wildfire Wildland-Urban Interface
Inclusion Criteria: Wildfire Event
At a Glance
📰 11 Sources
👥 4 People
Key individuals: Mark Linane, Dave Dahlberg, Steve Oaks, Matt Farris

Description

Key Fire Metrics

  • Acreage: 18,430 acres
  • Ignition Date: July 8, 2017, at approx. 1:43 p.m.
  • Containment Date: October 5, 2017
  • Cause: Vehicle fire igniting dry grass
  • Structures Lost: 16 residences, 30 outbuildings
  • Injuries: 9 non-fatal

Brief Summary

Ignited by a vehicle fire near Lake Cachuma during a severe heatwave, the 2017 Whittier Fire rapidly burned through the Santa Ynez Mountains, primarily impacting community recreational facilities. The event is defined by the near-total destruction of the Rancho Alegre Outdoor School and a dramatic rescue operation at Circle V Ranch Camp, where approximately 83 children and staff were trapped. The fire's burn scar later produced a major debris flow in 2019 that closed Highway 154 for a month.

Detailed Summary

The Whittier Fire began on the afternoon of July 8, 2017, when heat from a passenger vehicle ignited dry grass near Camp Whittier along Highway 154. Fueled by triple-digit temperatures and sundowner winds, the blaze spread with extreme speed through dense chaparral that had not burned for nearly 70 years. The fire quickly jumped the highway, forcing the emergency evacuation of thousands of visitors from the Cachuma Lake Recreation Area.

As the fire front advanced, it blocked the sole access road to Circle V Ranch Camp with falling trees and boulders, trapping approximately 83 people, including 56 children. The campers and staff sheltered inside the camp's dining hall for several hours. A complex rescue was executed by a County Fire bulldozer operator, who cleared a path through the burning landscape, allowing Sheriff's Search and Rescue teams to evacuate the group safely.

Nearby, the fire overran the Rancho Alegre Boy Scout Camp and Outdoor School, causing catastrophic damage. Sources reported that 47 of the camp's 53 structures were destroyed, and animals housed at its nature center were killed. The facility, a cornerstone of regional youth outdoor education, was almost entirely lost.

The fire's westward spread was partially checked by the burn scar of the 2016 Sherpa Fire, but an unexpected wind event on July 13 caused a significant flare-up that threatened parts of Goleta. Full containment was not achieved until October 5. Nearly 18 months later, in February 2019, intense rainfall on the burn scar triggered a major debris flow in Duval Canyon, underscoring the fire's lasting environmental impact.

Sources (11)

Source: Engilish Wikipedia
Date: January 1, 2024
Read full article → https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Whittier_Fire
Source: Other
Date: July 15, 2017
Read full article → https://santamariatimes.com/news/local/wildfire/whittier-fire-struck-hard-at-santa-ynez-camps-bringing-hours-of-fear-devastating-loss-but/article_8fe26b73-b985-5865-a0b4-7d45e61d8021.html
People Mentioned (4)
Implementer 1
👤 Steve Oaks primary Implementer
Division Chief / Evacuation Supervisor at Santa Barbara County Fire Department
As the designated evacuation supervisor, he was a key decision-maker on-scene at the Circle V Ranch rescue, coordinating efforts to safely extract the trapped campers.
Participant 3
👤 Dave Dahlberg primary Participant
Patrolman at U.S. Forest Service
He was the first first responder to successfully drive up the blocked access road to reach the 83 trapped campers and staff at Circle V Ranch, providing reassurance and on-site coordination for several hours until a rescue could be executed.
👤 Matt Farris primary Participant
Battalion Chief at Santa Barbara County Fire Department
He was one of the fire officials who reached the trapped campers at Circle V Ranch and engaged in active fire suppression to protect the structures and people sheltering inside.
👤 Mark Linane primary Participant
Firefighter / Bulldozer Operator at Santa Barbara County Fire Department
As a bulldozer operator, he single-handedly cleared a path through the burning landscape, enabling the rescue of 83 children and staff trapped at Circle V Ranch Camp.
Source: Santa Barbara Independent News
Date: July 13, 2017
Read full article → https://www.independent.com/2017/07/13/whittier-fire/
📋

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 named wildfire that burned 18,430 acres, destroyed 46 structures, prompted large-scale evacuations, and required a major multi-agency response. This aligns perfectly with the definition of a significant wildfire event.

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