On January 5, 1979, a U.S. Department of Agriculture Forest Service report entitled "The Mudflow -Landslide Hazard at Wrightwood" was submitted by Eugene Kojan, Ph.d. Project Engineering Geologist. It reviewed the condition of scarps left by the major flooding and the tumbling block hazard of Heath Canyon. Since 1941, hazards due to mudflow at Wrightwood has significantly and progressively increased because of the marked increase in slide activity in the area of upper Heath Canyon. The perimeter of the slide zone increased approximately 400 percent and virtually effects all of Heath Canyon and not just the upper parts! To top of the scary news, at the head of the main landslide source area, new failure cracks had developed within 150 feet south of the main crown scrap. That translates into "the whole slide is pretty much fractured and unstable". The rock material along the failure surface has "significant reduced residual strength" undercutting an immediate potential volume of approximately 1.5 million cubic yards! Kojan reported, "If the large portions of this already failed mass were to be mobilized at once ('comes down', in layman terms), an additional 1.5 to 2 million cubic yards of active slide material could be derived by the mudflow from the western margin on Heath Creek. An additional mass in excess of 10 million cubic yards of potential mudflow material is precariously perched within the old landslide masses just to the east of the present heath Creek main source area."
The report gave just two recommendation to prevent the mudslides from causes disastrous results: Construct three large dams at the mouths of Sheep, Heath, and Acorn Canyons which would be large enough to contain any conceivable total volume of landslide-mudslide debris. Such a project in a highly seismically active area would be very costly, perhaps several times the value of the property in Wrightwood. The other alternative is to remove the people and structure that would be destroyed by mudflows. Hey, that idea seems feasible! Not! Try moving folks away from paradise. Like I said before, the blame for all this mess is Vincent's and a flaking gal named Pelona Schist.
To those that read this and think that living here is a no-win proposition, think again. People who were here in the 1938, 1941 and 1965 floods still live here. Save and happy like little pups smug in a rug. Over the years, the county flood district has continued to fine tune that flood canal behind town, and the drainage systems that goes around it and into the desert floor to the north. Federal agencies, county emergency details, such as the fire department, even the town council, have formed plans to handle such disasters of the mountain coming down. Such information is available to you upon request, it is also presented to the community as a whole at different times during the year. Will the flood and mudslides continue to come? Yup...it's a gravity thing. Praying for rain and snow is encouraged, just pray that it stays in safe amounts. Will we survive the next big one? That's not only up to our emergency services...but it is also up to the people of the community. The major storms of years past had brought out the best of people. Neighbors got out of their comfy couches and warm cabins and ventured into the soggy rain and numbing cold to help their neighbor. I firmly believed that's what helped the town to survive and build its true character. Surviving depends on you, neighbor...and me.
A piece of Wrightwood's History, Terry Graham, WW
References:
Wrightwood Mountaineer, Dec. 2, 1965
1941 Heath Mud Slide Showed Village Cooperation, G.S. Corpe
Wrightwood Roots "Your Name is Mud", June 1, 2001
The Sam Bernardino Sun "Flood Buried Many Homes", Dec 2, 1965
U.S.DEPT of Agriculture Project 01601 Report, submitted by Eugene Kojan, PH.D. Project Engineering Geologist, Jan. 2, 1979