• Altadena’s 104-year vacation lighting custom generally known as Christmas Tree Lane escaped injury from the hearth regardless of a torrent of embers coming down on its historic deodar cedars. • Fierce Santa Ana winds did break branches from a number of the timber, however most on Santa Rosa Avenue — the true title of the road — seem unscathed. • The lights are normally taken down each February, however the head of the volunteer affiliation hopes they are often turned on once more “to show we’re still here.”
The individuals who have a tendency Altadena’s venerable deodar cedars have suffered incomprehensible group losses this week, however Santa Rosa Avenue, a.okay.a. Christmas Tree Lane, is a tiny vibrant spot among the many wreckage wrought by the Eaton hearth.
Regardless of what residents described as a fiery rain of embers propelled by hurricane power winds, the road’s 135 cedars appeared unfazed by the hearth. The raging Santa Ana winds have damaged a couple of branches, however total, the large timber with their swish drapey limbs appear effective, which implies the group’s 104-year vacation gentle custom can proceed.
Tony Ward and his spouse, Maureen, longtime residents of Santa Rosa Avenue and previous presidents of the Christmas Tree Lane Assn., went out for dinner in Hastings Ranch on Jan. 7, after the ability went out at their dwelling.
1000’s of individuals prove yearly to drive below an almost mile-long cover of sparkly lights strung on 135 deodar cedars on Santa Rosa Avenue in Altadena, a 104-year, volunteer-led custom generally known as Christmas Tree Lane.
(Los Angeles Instances)
The wind was intense once they left “but there wasn’t any discussion on the media about a fire,” Ward mentioned.
Their dinner outing was quick. Earlier than their meal was served, Ward mentioned, “the waiter came up and apologized. He said, ‘We have to give you the meal to go because we have an evacuation order.’ ”
The Wards’ dwelling of practically 50 years is on the southern finish of Santa Rosa Avenue, close to Woodbury Street, about six miles west of Hastings Ranch. Because the couple returned dwelling and regarded to the north, “we could see Eaton Canyon was totally involved in fire, from top to bottom, and we were flabbergasted. It happened so fast,” Ward mentioned.
As soon as they bought dwelling, they started packing “all the things we could think of, photos and business records, into our car and van,” in case they needed to evacuate, Ward mentioned. “The wind was intense, and the smoke was just heavy, heavy, heavy.”
The gusting Santa Ana winds blew fiery embers all through Altadena, together with on Woodlyn Street, on Jan. 8 throughout the Eaton hearth.
(Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Instances)
The Wards have lived of their dwelling for 50 years and by no means skilled this type of hearth occasion. Between the fixed roar of the wind and the advancing flames, sleep was unattainable that evening.
They joined their neighbor standing watch exterior “to see if anything flared up so we could run and stamp it out,” Ward mentioned.
By 2:30 a.m. final Wednesday, “we noticed embers flying all the way down from way up in the [Angeles National] forest. They would strike the trees [the deodar cedars] and burst into little sparklers. And most of the embers went out, but this was something we’d never experienced before,” he mentioned.
“And in addition to the wind roaring, there were very loud reports we could hear in the background, which we surmised to be exploding canisters of fuel for barbecues and outdoor space heater,” he added. “It was pretty scary because the wind was so intense, and the dust and ashes, everything was right in your eyes. And who thinks of wearing safety goggles? We had no idea that anything like this could happen so far away from the canyons and the national forest.”
When the evacuation order got here at 5 a.m., the Wards lastly left. They had been capable of return briefly final Thursday and located their dwelling nonetheless standing. It seems that a lot of the homes on Santa Rosa Avenue south of Mariposa Avenue escaped hearth injury, though homes on adjoining streets had been burned.
And the cedars, most of which had been planted within the late Eighties, appeared effective.
A big damaged department from a deodar cedar hangs precariously from a string of lights on Santa Rosa Avenue the day after huge winds and the Eaton hearth tore by means of Altadena.
(Jeanette Marantos / Los Angeles Instances)
Nevertheless, there may be wind injury. Just a few giant branches damaged within the heavy winds dragged strings of lights with them to the road. However the timber didn’t burn, and it’s not clear why.
“They are pretty lusciously green,” mentioned Cristhian Mace, a pure areas biologist for Los Angeles County Parks and Recreation, “which makes me think they were well irrigated, and that’s probably one of the factors that saved them. They weren’t dry and brittle, and when you look at cedar bark, it’s thick and somewhat fire resistant. … I don’t know how else to account for their resiliency.”
The timber are effectively tended by the Christmas Tree Lane Assn., however they’re largely cared for by the owners on whose property the timber reside, mentioned Assn. President Scott Wardlaw. Throughout drought years, the affiliation has taken steps to offer the timber further water, however normally, Wardlaw mentioned, it has to warn owners towards overwatering the deodar cedars. An excessive amount of water can result in Armillaria root illness, a lethal type of root rot.
Preserving the timber is crucial, as a result of with out the cedars, there is no such thing as a Christmas Tree Lane.
In November 2024, volunteers use ropes and pulleys to hold lengthy strings of vacation lights on Christmas Tree Lane’s deodar cedars. Casty Fortich, far left, and Temple Metropolis Excessive College scholar Persistence Cam, pull as Scott Wardlaw, president of the Altadena Christmas Tree Lane Assn., and Feli Hernandez, proper, look on.
(Genaro Molina / Los Angeles Instances)
It takes 10 weekends and greater than a 100 volunteers to string these lights yearly; volunteers start their work in September to be prepared for Altadena’s free winter pageant and tree lighting occasion in early December. The identical volunteers normally begin taking the lights down for the 12 months in February to keep away from winter rains.
The pageant is historically held within the parking space of the Altadena Public Library on the nook of Mariposa Avenue and Santa Rosa Avenue. Final week, a number of buildings on the intersection burned, together with the Altadena Senior Middle subsequent door, however the library was saved.
The realm lighting occasion that started in 1920 nonetheless has a small-town, old style really feel, with cubicles and scorching chocolate, native leaders making speeches and attendees strolling the route as soon as the lights are turned on. The Christmas Tree Lane show itself is fairly low-tech, with no music or particular results. However it nonetheless attracts 1000’s of individuals yearly for the easy pleasure of driving slowly for a close to mile below a cover of sparkly lights.
Wardlaw mentioned at the very least 13 of the Christmas Tree Lane volunteers misplaced houses within the hearth. Additionally, the native faculty that had let the affiliation park its truck and retailer its container of kit free of charge was destroyed within the hearth.
Now the affiliation is grappling with the place it would retailer its truck and tools, which didn’t burn within the hearth.
The trick will likely be discovering a brand new storage place the cash-strapped nonprofit can afford. “The cheapest storage units charge around $5 a day for a truck, nearly $1,900 a year, which we can’t afford for just parking,” Wardlaw mentioned.
The affiliation depends on annual $35 memberships and sponsors to cowl its bills, and several other of its sponsors, together with Altadena {Hardware}, St. Mark’s College, Pasadena Waldorf College and Western Fence Co., misplaced buildings within the hearth.
These losses have weighed heavy on Wardlaw, who, like most displaced Altadena residents, is chafing to get into the burned areas, presently closed to the general public, to see what has been misplaced, and what, if something, could be saved. The damaged tree branches on the road must be cleared away, he mentioned, and the strings of lights, lots of that are possible damaged, must be repaired or changed.
The work would require volunteers, lots of whom will likely be preoccupied by their very own losses, Wardlaw acknowledged, however he sees the work forward as a tiny act of defiance towards all the hearth’s horrible destruction.
“Something I want to do, if it’s feasible, is turn the lights on again as soon as possible,” he mentioned, “Just so we can say, ‘We’re still here.’ ”