Silverado Canyon dwellers hunker down as storms threaten hillsides
Deanna Spangler was manning the cash register earlier this week at the Silverado Canyon Market while her fiance and the co-owner of the business, Jeff Hoagland, was pushing water out the back door.
He seemed to think the problem stemmed from a bad gutter, and with a creek running behind the shop, the couple, though they had owned the business for only five months, understood what they were up against.
As the Silverado Canyon burn area dealt with on-and-off voluntary evacuation orders, the area’s small business community tried to keep humming.
“The last thing we want to do is close the store,” Spangler said. “We’re kind of a command post for the community.”
This Orange County outpost, a funky space of hills, narrow roads and construction far removed from any model of beige stucco coherence, remains a sanctuary for those who appreciate its uniqueness and naturalness. The dedication persists, despite the area’s history of fires, resulting in mudslides during the rainy season because of denuded hills and rock slides.
“It’s so worth it. I can’t imagine living anywhere else,” said Nikki Yorba, who has lived in the canyon since 1974.
She was emerging Tuesday from the compact — at a little more than 1,000 square feet — library, carrying tapes as she prepared to head to her mother’s house in Anaheim Hills.
“Residents have to decide whether to stay in or out” and not wait until the situation requires emergency aid, Yorba said.
Marcy Lenk has lived in the canyon for 4 1/2 years. For Lenk, who grew up “in nature” in the Czech Republic, “this is the most nature you can get” in Orange County.
She and her husband and two daughters, ages 4 and 2, have 16 pets, including dogs, cats, chickens, rabbits and a tortoise.
She feels that the family lives in a safe zone in a home surrounded by concrete and pavers and not the sort of threatening hillsides found elsewhere. Lenk said the most they did to brace for the coming rains was to cover their flat roof with tarp.
According to the Orange County Fire Authority, a voluntary evacuation order went into effect earlier in the week in the canyon, was discontinued at 5 p.m. Tuesday and was put into effect again Wednesday morning — in what could be a pattern for the duration of this anticipated spate of rainstorms.
A mud flow had hampered travel in the 31300 block of Silverado Canyon Road, said the fire agency’s Capt. Steve Concialdi.
The wildfire of September 2014 left a “burn scar” on the landscape, he said. Hundreds of acres burned during that fire, and mandatory evacuations were ordered.
“Experts say it takes about five years for enough growth to come back after a major fire,” Concialdi added.
Conditions in the canyon are being monitored by the Orange County Sheriff’s Department, county public works and the fire authority.Meanwhile, the Silverado Community Center, at 27641 Silverado Canyon Road, is functioning as an evacuation center.
Any decision to go to a mandatory evacuation order is not based “on any one specific thing,” said Lt. Jeff Hallock of the Sheriff’s Department. “It’s based on predictions from the National Weather Service, if we get to a point where we feel the service is predicting a certain amount of rain in a certain amount of time.”
Even under a mandatory evacuation, people can’t be forced out of their homes, Hallock said, noting “not great compliance” in Silverado under such orders. “Few people leave,” he added.
“Most people here have lived here a long time and won’t move until there is pending doom,” noted Hoagland, whose shop dates to 1964.
As he pointed out the propane, tools and emergency supplies he was building up at the store, Hoagland added, “People up here seem to be pretty prepared.”
It’s a “sturdy bunch here,” said Lucille Cruz, who has been the community’s librarian for about 40 years and was keeping the lights on with library assistant Ruth Loc early this week.
“I used to live in the canyon,” said Loc. “I wasn’t a canyon person. I don’t like the floods, fires and coyotes.”
William Walz, an attorney who works in Foothill Ranch but lives in the canyon, said he appreciates the old county feel of the place, with “traces of Indians, mines, Timothy Leary, the Hells Angels.”
Isidoro Hernandez was serving food and beer at the rustic Silverado Cafe, another place where residents can congregate to “see what’s going on.”
“The community keeps an eye on each other,” he said.
Meanwhile, a brown UPS truck made a couple of stops and then parked for a bit at the post office.
“Now it’s just a waiting game,” Spangler said, as people straggled into the market and the rain continued, sometimes intensely and then backing off.