Mary Lindsey isn’t sure what awakened her in the middle of the night.
Maybe it was the hum of helicopters, she said, or perhaps just the providence of God. The power in her neighborhood on the eastern edge of Santa Clarita had been shut off since 11 a.m. Thursday, but at 2:30 a.m. Friday she noticed light filtering in through the bedroom curtains.
“That’s not right,” she thought, grabbing a flashlight. Outside, a sheriff’s deputy cruising by noticed her light in the window and flicked on his sirens. The deputy ran toward her home, banging on the door.
“It’s a mandatory evacuation!” he shouted. “Have you gotten any alerts?”
“No,” she said, looking up the street. “All of these houses have people in them.”
Utility power outages are complicating evacuation efforts as wildfires rage in Northern and Southern California.
Oct. 26, 2019
Because the power was out and it was pitch-black on her street, Lindsey, 64, said, she thinks the authorities may have thought everyone had already left the area. Lindsey and her husband, Charles, had been ready to go for hours, but no warning ever came — no Amber Alert-style message, no phone call, no patrol cars with bullhorns.
Advertisement
“Nothing,” she said, sighing.
Lindsey and her husband were among 40,000 people who were evacuated as firefighters continued to battle the raging, wind-driven Tick fire Friday.
The fire broke out shortly before 1:45 p.m. Thursday along Tick Canyon Road.
The winds picked up in the wee hours of Friday morning, causing the fire to breach the 14 Freeway between Sand Canyon and Agua Dulce, burning an additional 700 to 800 acres.
“That was not expected,” said Deputy Fire Chief Vince Pena. “We’ve been working on that all morning and through the day.”
Northern California braced for a weekend in uncharted territory as PG&E prepared to shut off power to more than 2 million people as the region faced one of the worst periods of fire weather in a generation.
Oct. 25, 2019
As of Friday evening the Tick fire had consumed more than 4,000 acres and was only 10% contained, fire officials said. At least six structures were destroyed and seven damaged.
Roughly 1,300 firefighters were on the scene Friday attempting to defend homes and build containment lines around the blaze amid challenging red-flag conditions that were expected to linger late into the night.
Some residents of the Santa Clarita Valley were allowed to go back to their homes as of Friday evening. However, large swaths remained under evacuation orders.
Advertisement
“We hope to let more folks in their homes tomorrow, but right now we are still concerned about the winds,” Pena said. “We want to keep this fire out of the Angeles National Forest and ensure the stability of all the housing communities in Santa Clarita.”
Marsha McLean, mayor of Santa Clarita, hailed the firefighters’ work.
“It was nothing short of a miracle that the fire department has been able to contain the fire as well as they have with these winds,” she said.
1/65
A charred utility pole lies amid burned machinery along Chalk Hill Road near Healdsburg on Tuesday, Oct. 29, 2019. (Luis Sinco/Los Angeles Times)
2/65
A house burns along Highway 128 near Healdsburg on Tuesday, Oct. 29, 2019. (Luis Sinco/Los Angeles Times)
3/65
Charred hillsides show the path of the Kincade fire next to vineyards near Healdsburg. (Luis Sinco/Los Angeles Times)
4/65
Vehicles burned by the Kincade fire along Chalk Hill Road near Healdsburg. (Luis Sinco/Los Angeles Times)
5/65
A Cal Fire vehicle drives past a smoldering eucalyptus tree along Chalk Hill Road near Healdsburg on Sunday, Oct. 27, 2019. (Luis Sinco/Los Angeles Times)
6/65
The Soda Rock winery along Highway 128 near Healdsburg is consumed by the Kincade fire early Sunday morning. (Luis Sinco/Los Angeles Times)
7/65
The Soda Rock winery along Highway 128 near Healdsburg is consumed by the Kincade fire early Sunday morning. (Luis Sinco/Los Angeles Times)
8/65
A pair of men open a gate to allow firefighters access to a ranch along Highway 128 near Healdsburg as the Kincade fire flares up early Sunday morning. (Luis Sinco/Los Angeles Times)
9/65
Near Healdsburg, Calif., a firefighter along Highway 128 observes the Soda Rock winery being consumed by the Kincade fire early Sunday morning. (Luis Sinco / Los Angeles Times)
10/65
Smoke from the Kincade fire partially obscures the sun as it rises above Chalk Hill Road near Healdsburg on Sunday morning. (Luis Sinco / Los Angeles Times)
11/65
The Soda Rock winery along State Highway 128 near Healdsburg, Calif., is consumed by the Kincade fire early Sunday morning. (Luis Sinco / Los Angeles Times)
12/65
A firefighter mops up hot spots from the Kincade fire after it jumped Chalk Hill Road near Healdsburg, Calif., on Sunday morning. (Luis Sinco / Los Angeles Times)
13/65
A police cruiser patrols downtown Healdsburg, where power was cut ahead of expected high winds early Sunday morning. (Luis Sinco / Los Angeles Times)
14/65
Shopkeepers Sodhi Singh, left, and Navneet Singh prepare to close down their gas station and convenience store after the lights went out in Healdsburg at about 8 p.m. Saturday night. (Luis Sinco / Los Angeles Times)
15/65
Downtown Healdsburg is deserted after a mandatory evacuation of the town was ordered on Saturday ahead of an expected high wind event in the area. (Luis Sinco / Los Angeles Times)
16/65
Traffic jams Dry Creek Road in Healdsburg after authorities ordered the evacuation of the city on Saturday. (Luis Sinco / Los Angeles Times)
17/65
A Boeing 747 supertanker drops a large load of fire retardant on a ridgeline above Healdsburg on Saturday. (Luis Sinco/Los Angeles Times)
18/65
Firefighters set a back fire in the hills above Healdsburg on Saturday. (Luis Sinco/Los Angeles Times)
19/65
Rosalia Schmidt (left) and Pamela Hardine look at a neighbor’s burned home from the Tick fire in Santa Clarita. (Michael Owen Baker/For The Times)
20/65
Rosalia Schmidt thanks Los Angeles County Fire Department hand crew members in Canyon Country. (Michael Owen Baker/For The Times)
21/65
A Los Angeles County Fire Department hand crew lines up to do mop up work at the Tick fire in Canyon Country. (Michael Owen Baker/For The Times)
22/65
Pamela Hardine sweeps ash from her home next to neighbors’ homes that burned from the Tick fire in Canyon Country. (Michael Owen Baker/For The Times)
23/65
Homes on Arches Lane in Canyon Country are pink from fire retardant. (Michael Owen Baker/For The Times)
24/65
Cal Fire personnel look over burnt hills in Canyon Country due to the Tick Fire. (Michael Owen Baker/For The Times)
25/65
Marrin unpacks clothes from his car in Canyon Country as residents returned to their homes. Marrin said he packed his car but didn’t evacuated and helped put out fires. (Michael Owen Baker/For The Times)
26/65
Los Angeles County Fire Department Superintendent Brian Riley walks through a burnt hill due to the Tick fire in Canyon Country. (Michael Owen Baker/For The Times)
27/65
Firefighters battle a mulch fire at a nursery along Sierra Highway in Santa Clarita. (Irfan Khan / Los Angeles Times)
28/65
Ventura County firefighter Zach Ary douses a smoldering residence in Santa Clarita. (Irfan Khan / Los Angeles Times)
29/65
A huge plume of smoke rises from the Kincade fire in the hills around Geyserville. (Luis Sinco/Los Angeles Times)
30/65
Firefighters spray water on a home destroyed by the Tick fire in the 29000 block of Sequoia Road in Santa Clarita. (Irfan Khan / Los Angeles Times)
31/65
A fire crew makes its way down the closed 14 Freeway in Santa Clarita. (Irfan Khan / Los Angeles Times)
32/65
A house is covered in pink fire retardant on Arches Lane in Santa Clarita. (Irfan Khan / Los Angeles Times)
33/65
Firefighters work the hills near Santa Clarita, laying containment lines. (Irfan Khan / Los Angeles Times)
34/65
The closed 14 Freeway in Santa Clarita. (Irfan Khan / Los Angeles Times)
35/65
Firefighters douse hot spots at two charred homes along Red Wine Road in Geyserville on Friday morning. (Luis Sinco / Los Angeles Times)
36/65
A charred vehicle sits along Red Wine Road in Geyserville on Friday morning with lights from firefighting vehicles visible in the background. (Luis Sinco / Los Angeles Times)
37/65
A structure continues to burn after the Kincade fire moved through the Geyserville area. (Justin Sullivan / Getty Images)
38/65
In a long-exposure image, firefighters climb a burned hillside to put out hot spots with a hose line behind homes off Nearview Drive Thursday night. (Patrick T. Fallon / For The Times)
39/65
In a long-exposure image, firefighters work behind homes off Nearview Drive. (Patrick T. Fallon / For The Times)
40/65
Firefighters with the Los Padres Strike Team monitor flames burning on a hillside off Sierra Highway in Agua Dulce. (Mel Melcon / Los Angeles Times)
41/65
Firefighters battle a brush fire that broke out Thursday afternoon in the Sepulveda Basin. (Patrick T. Fallon / For The Times)
42/65
Santa Monica city firefighters hose down embers from the Tick fire near Agua Dulce. (Patrick T. Fallon / For The Times)
43/65
David Leventhal monitors flames burning on a hillside near his home in Agua Dulce. (Mel Melcon / Los Angeles Times)
44/65
A plane drops fire retardant on hillside flames in Agua Dulce. (Mel Melcon / Los Angeles Times)
45/65
Firefighters battle a brush fire that broke out Thursday afternoon in the Sepulveda Basin. (Patrick T. Fallon / For The Times)
46/65
Helicopters fly into the Sepulveda Basin to fill up with water to battle a brush fire Thursday. (Patrick T. Fallon / For The Times)
47/65
Firefighters battle a brush fire that broke out Thursday afternoon in the Sepulveda Basin. (Patrick T. Fallon / For The Times)
48/65
Firefighters battle a brush fire that broke out Thursday afternoon in the Sepulveda Basin. (Patrick T. Fallon / For The Times)
49/65
Firefighters battle a brush fire that broke out Thursday afternoon in the Sepulveda Basin. (Patrick T. Fallon / For The Times)
50/65
Firefighters battle a brush fire that broke out Thursday afternoon in the Sepulveda Basin. (Patrick T. Fallon / For The Times)
51/65
Firefighters battle a brush fire that broke out Thursday afternoon in the Sepulveda Basin. (Patrick T. Fallon / For The Times)
52/65
People leave the Sepulveda Basin as firefighters battle a brush fire that broke out Thursday afternoon. (Patrick T. Fallon / For The Times)
53/65
Firefighters battle a brush fire that broke out Thursday afternoon in the Sepulveda Basin. (Patrick T. Fallon / For The Times)
54/65
A building is engulfed in flames at a vineyard during the Kincade fire near Geyserville. (Josh Edelson / AFP/Getty Images)
55/65
Charred grapevines are seen after the Kincade fire moved through the Geyserville area. (Justin Sullivan / Getty Images)
56/65
A home burns near a vineyard after the Kincade fire burned through the area in Geyserville. (Justin Sullivan / Getty Images)
57/65
A burned car sits next to a swing after the Kincade fire moved through the area in Geyserville. (Justin Sullivan / Getty Images )
58/65
Firefighters confer while battling the Kincade fire near Geyserville. Portions of Northern California remain in the dark after Pacific Gas & Electric cut power to prevent the sparking of wildfires during dry and windy conditions. (Noah Berger / Associated Press)
59/65
A firetruck heads toward flames of the Kincade fire near Geyserville. The fire broke out in spite of rolling blackouts by utility companies in both Northern and Southern California. (Josh Edeleson /AFP/Getty Images)
60/65
Flames approach a vineyard during the Kincade fire near Geyserville, Calif. (Josh Edelson /AFP/Getty Images)
61/65
Embers and smoke spread over a hillside during the Kincade fire near Geyserville, Calif. (Josh Edelson / AFP/Getty Images)
62/65
High winds fuel the Kincade fire near Geyserville, Calif. (Kent Porter / Press Democrat)
63/65
Photographers documenting the Kincade fire leave as the fire approaches Geysers Road in Sonoma County. (Kent Porter / Press Democrat)
64/65
Cows stand on a hill during the Kincade fire in Geyserville, Calif. Fueled by high winds, the fire has burned thousands of acres in a matter of hours and has prompted evacuations in the area. (Justin Sullivan / Getty Images)
65/65
The Kincaide fire burns a hillside in Geyserville, Calif. (Justin Sullivan / Getty Images )
Severe fire and wind conditions prompted Gov. Gavin Newsom to declare a state of emergency for Los Angeles and for Sonoma County, which is grappling with the massive Kincade fire. Los Angeles County Supervisor Janice Hahn also declared a local emergency for the county Friday.
Those winds are expected to die down considerably by Saturday. The National Weather Service is predicting wind speeds of up to 20 mph in Santa Clarita on Saturday, with a high of 89 degrees.
Temperatures are expected to cool down through the beginning next week, but the National Weather Service said more Santa Ana high wind events are expected in both LA and Ventura counties with gusts of 35-50 mph late Sunday night and Monday, and more potential strong winds coming Wednesday into Thursday.
Commuters traveling in and out of the Santa Clarita Valley faced a traffic nightmare after the Tick fire jumped the 14 freeway.
Oct. 25, 2019
There are signs of the Tick fire all across the Santa Clarita Valley.
A trailer full of evacuated llamas sat in a Target parking lot, and several restaurants were transformed into unofficial shelters. At a Santa Clarita Starbucks on Friday morning, a woman rested her head on a wooden table, and a man whose electricity had been cut off watched a livestream of the fire from a TV news chopper on his phone.
Five miles away, on the other side of the 5 Freeway, evacuees were starting to trickle into West Ranch High School, where the Red Cross had set up a shelter.
Leticia Fetterly and her 19-year-old daughter, Danielle, sat on cots facing each other and recounted the past 24 hours. Sometime around 1:30 p.m. Thursday, Fetterly yelled into the bathroom of her Canyon Country home.
“Danielle,” she said, “you might want to take a really quick shower. I think we need to evacuate.”
A pillar of pitch-black smoke rose a few miles away, and once they spotted a water drop nearby, they knew it was time to leave. Fetterly packed up her mortgage papers and the negatives of photos she’d taken of her three children over the years. Her daughter, a college student, grabbed her Polaroids, some schoolwork and her laptop.
Advertisement
Fetterly said she’d evacuated once before, about a decade ago, but this time felt more urgent. Some of her neighbors thought she was overreacting Thursday, she said, but her mind was racing with thoughts of the 85 people who died last year in the Camp fire, the deadliest blaze in California history.
“Don’t they remember Paradise?” Fetterly asked.
For her part, she couldn’t stop thinking about the victims and their last few seconds — that moment, she said, when they realized it was too late. Her daughter, who was sitting cross-legged on her cot, rubbed her hands on a U-shaped travel pillow resting in her lap and winced.
“I’ve been really worried,” she said, adding that she’d had a bad feeling in her stomach since Wednesday night, when she’d noticed an all-too-familiar combination of heat and strong winds.
#TickFire@LACOFD Firefighters braving arduous conditions shoring up and reinforcing containment lines. Supported by fixed wing retardant dropping aircraft the difficult work separating burned fuel from unburned vegetation continues. pic.twitter.com/gxSUcXyiCn
In the Sierra Hills neighborhood, residents watched late Thursday evening as firefighters from the Santa Monica Fire Department hosed down the garden of a home. Flames that sprang from windblown embers burned down a greenhouse and play area of the home near a hillside that surrounds the cul-de-sac on Kenroy Avenue. Neighbors gathered on the street keeping an eye out for any flare-ups on the hillside, passing the time with cups of wine and beer.
Support our journalism
Subscriptions make our reporting on wildfires and power outages possible. Get full access to our journalism for just 99 cents for the first four weeks. Already a subscriber? Your contribution helped tell this story. Thank you.
At the Sierra Heights mobile home park, many residents appeared to have evacuated. Wind chimes and crackling fire nearby pierced the silence as flames glowed on the hills to the east and in the canyons below.
Advertisement
On a hilltop less than a quarter-mile to the southwest, the remnants of one residence were still burning early Friday morning. A white sign at the home’s entryway reading “La Granja” (The Farm) had fallen from its post. It appeared the fire had come quickly, forcing the home’s occupants to rush to safety. Two bags of clothing were left in the driveway, still in perfect condition.
Those who fled from their homes in the early morning hours Friday described a scene of chaos as authorities charged into their neighborhoods on the eastern edge of Santa Clarita to rouse them as the fire roared closer.
Call them Santa Ana winds or Diablo winds. They make brush fires explode.
Oct. 25, 2019
Before 6 a.m. Friday, the parking lot at the College of the Canyons campus in Valencia, where another shelter had been established, was packed with cars and RVs. It was dark and quiet, except for the sound of cats whining from their cages. Some evacuees slept in their cars; others stared into the glow of their cellphones, desperate for updates.
Lee Mentzer, 78, stood in the parking lot with his grandson. They both felt like they were in a daze.
“We live in Canyon Country,” Mentzer said, closing his eyes. “Hopefully we still live there.”
Times staff writers Emily Baumgaertner and Leila Miller contributed to this report.
Hannah Fry covers breaking news for the Los Angeles Times. She most recently covered Orange County for The Times and has written extensively about criminal trials, housing, politics and government. In 2020, Fry was part of the team that was a Pulitzer finalist for its coverage of a boat fire that killed 34 people off the coast of Santa Barbara. Fry came to The Times from the Daily Pilot, where she covered coastal cities, education and crime. An Orange County native, Fry started her career as an intern at the Orange County Register.
Jaclyn Cosgrove covers the (great!) outdoors at the Los Angeles Times. They started at The Times in 2017 and have written about wildfires, culture, protests, crime and county government. In 2022, they managed For Your Mind, a yearlong mental health project. Cosgrove is originally from rural Oklahoma and is a proud Oklahoma State University graduate. They fell in love with the Southern California landscape when they moved here in 2017. They are always looking for the next adventure and welcome your ideas. If their phone goes straight to voicemail when you call, it probably means they’re in the mountains with their beloved dog, Maggie May.