Skip to main content

Santa Ana Condition: Winds of Myth and Tragedy

Support Provided By

There was a desert wind blowing that night. It was one of those hot dry Santa Anas that come down through the mountain passes and curl your hair and make your nerves jump and your skin itch. On nights like that every booze party ends in a fight. Meek little wives feel the edge of the carving knife and study their husbands' necks. Anything can happen. - From "Red Wind" by Raymond Chandler

The Santa Ana winds returned in the early hours of Friday morning, blowing through suburban neighborhoods in gusts that pulled the leaves from street trees and scattered them to mingle promiscuously with the fallen leaves of other streets. Real estate signs on their right-angle scaffolds swayed. Some premature Halloween garlands departed to the southwest. Some sleepers tossed uneasily in the drying air.

These winds blow from the northeast into the Los Angeles Basin from the Mojave Desert through the passes and canyons of the encircling mountains, accelerating their velocity and increasing their pressure with each lost foot of altitude. Some wind gusts in some seasons have reached hurricane force.

The Santa Anas are insistent weather, not our climate of distraction.

In our myths of this place, as told by Chandler and Didion and others, the cutting Santa Ana winds infect dissatisfied wives and argumentative husbands with thoughts of mayhem. The winds also are said to presage earthquakes.

The Santa Anas funnel into the orderly green of the Los Angeles Basin all the haunted and brown emptiness that lies outside. The spores of the fungus that cause Valley Fever are blown in on the Santa Ana winds.

The dry winds of October and early November are the engines of tragedy. Firefighters across Southern California -- particularly in foothill communities -- had begun preparations for wildfire suppression early this week, moving equipment into position at the foot of ridges where past fires have roared down on homes with the speed and noise of a freight train.

Every fire is different, of course, but the inevitability of fire is unchanging. The hillsides above Los Angeles have been drying for months. The seed capsules of native plants that only open after the passing of a wildfire are waiting. The non-native eucalyptus trees, themselves evolved by an ecology of fire, have piled oily bark and discarded limbs at the edges of housing tracts, like the pyre of an auto-da-fe.

Much of Los Angeles was made for burning, although we persist in thinking otherwise.

The Santa Ana winds have a lifecycle of threat. Each siege persists for about three days. On Sunday, perhaps, the "red flag" warnings on foothill streets will come down, the spindly branches of eucalyptus trees on the slopes above will grow still, and the itch to violence will end as the humidity rises.

Until the winds blow again.

Support Provided By
Read More
An oil pump painted white with red accents stands mid-pump on a dirt road under a blue, cloudy sky with a green, grassy slope in the background.

California’s First Carbon Capture Project: Vital Climate Tool or License to Pollute?

California’s first attempt to capture and sequester carbon involves California Resources Corp. collecting emissions at its Elk Hills Oil and Gas Field, and then inject the gases more than a mile deep into a depleted oil reservoir. The goal is to keep carbon underground and out of the atmosphere, where it traps heat and contributes to climate change. But some argue polluting industries need to cease altogether.
Gray industrial towers and stacks rise up from behind the pitched roofs of warehouse buildings against a gray-blue sky, with a row of yellow-gold barrels with black lids lined up in the foreground to the right of a portable toilet.

California Isn't on Track To Meet Its Climate Change Mandates. It's Not Even Close.

According to the annual California Green Innovation Index released by Next 10 last week, California is off track from meeting its climate goals for the year 2030, as well as reaching carbon neutrality by 2045.
A row of cows stands in individual cages along a line of light-colored enclosures, placed along a dirt path under a blue sky dotted with white puffy clouds.

A Battle Is Underway Over California’s Lucrative Dairy Biogas Market

California is considering changes to a program that has incentivized dairy biogas, to transform methane emissions into a source of natural gas. Neighbors are pushing for an end to the subsidies because of its impact on air quality and possible water pollution.