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Fire-Rescue Department

2007 - Witch Creek and Guejito Fires

Brush Rig at Witch Creek Fire

 

Just after noon on Oct. 21, 2007, arcing power lines whipped by Santa Ana winds started a small fire east of Ramona, in the Witch Creek area. By 4 a.m. the next day, the Witch Creek Fire had made its way to the San Diego City limits. The Guejito Fire started in the San Pasqual Valley at 2 a.m. on Oct. 22. It wasn't long before the two fires merged.

More than 197,990 acres of San Diego County burned in the fires, 9,250 acres within the city of San Diego. A total of 365 residences were destroyed in the city, all of them in Rancho Bernardo. Countywide, 1,141 residences were destroyed, and two people died.

The fires triggered the largest evacuation in county history. More than 500,000 people lived in the areas evacuated, 200,000 of them within the city.

City Skyline Harris Fire

At the height of the fire, the San Diego Fire-Rescue Department had 73 engines, seven trucks and 420 people deployed.

The Witch Creek and Guejito fires were among 21 wildfires burning in Southern California. The Harris Fire in southern San Diego County started the same day as the Witch Creek Fire. It grew to 90,440 acres but did not enter the city. Five people died in the Harris Fire.