Fires busy Costa Mesa firefighters
- Share via
James Meier
COSTA MESA -- Shirley Wyman celebrated the Fourth of July on Thursday
evening with family and friends in the front yard of the Westside house
she’s lived in for more than 20 years.
It was still a bit early for fireworks as the sun had yet to set, but
that didn’t stop several festive residents near Linden Place. Just before
7:25 p.m. Thursday, a fire ignited on the lower brush filled hillside
behind Wyman’s home, interrupting the festivities.
“Everybody rushed over with the hoses,” she said, explaining that she
and her neighbors first hosed down nearby homes whose owners were out of
town. With a garden hose in hand, Wyman also sprayed toward the dry
hillside until the paid firefighters arrived.
Once about 17 Costa Mesa firefighters arrived on the scene, it took
about 10 minutes to extinguish the fire, said Costa Mesa Fire Battalion
Chief Gregg Steward. But he appreciated the residents’ help, he expressed
concern over fighting brush fires.
“We don’t anyone to get in harm’s way,” Steward said. “In dry brush,
even firefighters can get killed.”
Though investigations were ongoing, he suggested that fireworks were
to blame.
“If I was a betting man, I would bet on fireworks -- probably illegal
fireworks,” he said as firefighters continued to spray the hillside as a
precaution.
Later in the night, shortly before 9 p.m., firefighters rushed to
another Costa Mesa fire. Steward said about two bedrooms of an apartment
in the 100 block of Santa Isabel Avenue caught fire, but wasn’t sure
whether fireworks had started that blaze.
Again, about 17 firefighters battled the fire, which appeared to have
“gone on for a while before we got here,” Steward said. In order to
better fight the blaze, firefighters used a chain saw to open the roof to
allow the smoke to ventilate. Once visibility became reasonable,
firefighters entered the home, which was also vacant. About 20 minutes
later, the fire was out.
No one was hurt in either blaze, Steward said, but extensive damage
was expected at the apartment.
* James Meier is the city editor. He can be reached at (949) 764-4324
or by e-mail at o7 [email protected] .
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.