A waterfall with trees on the side of a river

Eaton Canyon Escapes Major Pacific Storm With Minimal Damage

Fourteen, seven, eleven, and ten: This is how many inches of rain fell on Eaton Canyon over a 3-day period during the most cataclysmic storms of the century. In no fewer than 6 instances between 1943 and 2024, Eaton Wash has been completely reset, ordered, and renewed, giving rise to an entirely new park each time.

Between February 4-6, 2024, the San Gabriel Valley experienced 54 hours of continuous rainfall. In that time, a whopping 8.5″ of rain fell at Eaton Dam while over a foot of precipitation fell at Camp Hi-Hill behind Mount Wilson. The storm entered the top-10 list for rainiest 2-day period ever recorded in Pasadena, a list occupied almost exclusively with dates that saw catastrophic flooding in Eaton Canyon. This time, however, Eaton Canyon emerged essentially unscathed. No such flooding of any appreciable magnitude happened. In fact, not even the Mule Fat that lines the creek was messed with. How is such a thing even possible?

A waterfall with trees on the side of a river

Rising 6,000′ over the nearby Pacific Ocean, Eaton Canyon has a long and complicated relationship with flash flooding. For millions of years since it’s formation, Eaton Canyon’s flash flooding has gotten worse as the Sierra Madre fault continues to push it’s upper peaks higher and higher into the sky, enhancing orographic lift. Being at the intersection of a semi-arid desert, mountains, a reverse fault, and an ocean that covers half the planet, this history is not surprising. Hiking through the wash will yield lots of interesting discoveries, including flash flood debris, 12-ton boulders, and Bigcone Douglas Fir logs sitting out in the shrublands.

In general, there are 4 primary ingredients needed for major flash flooding in Eaton Canyon. Listed from most to least important, they are as follows:

  1. Torrential rain rates (>2.00″ / hr)
  2. Burned landscapes
  3. Waterlogged soils
  4. High snow levels

During the February 4-6, 2024 atmospheric river, the two most important ingredients for flash flooding in Eaton Canyon were absent. It has been 30 years since the 1993 Kinneloa Fire, and with so much vegetation covering the canyon, rain had a chance to soak in before running off the steep mountain slopes. Additionally, rain rates peaked at just 0.96″ / hr during the storm system, unlike the December 14, 2021 event when rain rates peaked at 2.51″ / hr. While enormous amounts of precipitation fell and snow levels remained >5,000′ during most of the system, major flash flooding in Eaton Canyon did not occur.


That all being said, here are some notable changes to the canyon from this storm system:

At approximately 2:42 pm on Sunday, February 4, 2024, a Coast Live Oak tree near the east end of the Meadow Trail collapsed in two parts about 1 minute apart. Parts of the tree are still alive and located at 34.181256342951244, -118.09564831451077. The Coast Live Oak was weighed down by the rain having begun about 40 minutes prior, and several large branches collapsed. Nobody was hurt, though several people by the first crossing heard the tree fall.

A tree in a forest

Yet another rockfall occured along the Mount Wilson Toll Road below the Pinecrest Gate sometime between Sunday night and 11 am Monday. A second rockfall occured just below Henninger Flats.

A rocky path
A close up of a rock wall

Photo by Sandy Chang

A new swale built by Eaton Canyon Nature Center staff last summer performed well during the storm. It prevented runoff from the parking lot from eroding other trails or being lost to Eaton Creek.

A fire hydrant that is sitting on a rock

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A group of people riding on the back of a truck

Meadow Trail Overgrowth Cleared By Volunteers, Nature Center Staff

On Saturday, January 13, 2024, 29 participants set out with bags, clippers, and loppers to clear significant overgrowth along the little-known Meadow Trail within Eaton Canyon Natural Area. Among them was the We Explore Earth group, a non-profit organization that seeks to “build stewards through nature experiences.” The Meadow Trail is a small nature trail that parallels the main trail. It begins near the last set of trash cans across the wash and ends only 0.16 miles later under an oak tree beside the main trail. The trail traverses an oak woodland known to support many different species of plants, animals, mosses, lichens, and fungi.

A man standing next to a forest

The Meadow Trail’s origins can be traced to the 1940s when the California Institute of Technology used it as a dirt road during its weapons manufacturing era of World War II. It is unknown exactly how the road was used, but it is known that the U.S. military tested weapons in Eaton Canyon during this time. More on Eaton Canyon’s involvement during World War II can be read here.

In addition to clearing the trail for human access, the crew also removed enormous amounts of the invasive Castor Bean plant growing in the area.

A group of bushes with a mountain in the background

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A close up of an animal

Non-Verbal Communication with Wildlife

In early November 2023, I had a nice encounter with a beautiful female coyote.

While walking slowly and quietly in the Eaton Canyon wash, I caught movement in my peripheral vision; some animal slipping behind a Laurel Sumac shrub. It was only the briefest of glimpses at first. Something small, perhaps a Cottontail? Maybe a Quail? Seconds later, the shape of a Coyote emerged from behind a rocky berm about twenty yards away.

At first, she was looking away from me. I raised my camera and took a few shots. While doing so, she looked directly at me with cautious interest. Surprising me, she continued to look at me rather than fleeing, allowing me to get several nice photographs of her.

In my working life as an investigator for a state agency, I had a bit of training in interview and interrogation techniques that involve the study of how humans use and instinctively interpret non-verbal communication (body language, eye contact, facial expressions, etc.). Whether we are aware of it or not, we (humans) are all expert in reading these communication clues as we deal with others.

It is believed that language – our words – only communicate thirty or forty percent of the information transmitted during our interaction with others. The remaining percentage is transmitted and received somewhat unconsciously via non-verbal cues.

Our mammalian cousins – especially predators like canines and felines – are also expert in communicating non-vocally. Body language, eye contact, the display of teeth, bristling fur, tail posture and movement, etc., are all extremely important communication devices for them. Unfortunately, our human non-verbal forms of communication don’t necessarily transmit the same information to animals and vice-versa.

For instance, when we meet another person, it’s polite to make eye-contact (just not too long) and to bare our teeth in a pleasant smile. For dogs and cats, especially their wild cousins, direct eye contact is threatening, as is a display of teeth. If you have a pet dog or cat you’re likely very well aware of the subtleties of their non-verbal communication and none of this will be news to you. If you’re not otherwise aware of this phenomenon and find it interesting, there are numerous studies and information to be found. Google “Non-verbal communication” and/or the term “kinesics” for some interesting reading.

Being interested in this subject, when engaged in wildlife photography or simply encountering mammals such as coyotes or bobcats (even domesticated dogs and cats), I try using body language and facial expressions to communicate that I am not a threat in the hope of prolonging the encounter. I do this by making brief eye contact with the animal, then blink my eyes slowly and at length before looking down and away. I understand this to be a signal of non-aggression – a sign of trust, if you will – that these animals seem to understand. As in: “I see you and I am not a threat to you and I’m not afraid of you.” This seems to put the animal at ease somewhat, allowing me better photo opportunities.

When trying to photograph prey animals such as birds, deer, rabbits, etc., we can also increase our chances of getting a better view or photographs, by not looking directly at them and sort of approaching in a side-long fashion as if we are unaware of their presence.

Prey animals are almost always cryptically colored and will often rely on their camouflage if they believe you haven’t seen them. The trick is not to behave like a predator. They already know you are there. Don’t try to sneak up on them. Behave as if you don’t see them and aren’t stalking them.

After taking several photos of this beautiful coyote, I lowered my camera and made eye contact with her. I then closed my eyes in a prolonged/slow blink, slowly turning my head slightly away. She almost immediately reciprocated, closing her eyes, at length. As she did so, I shouldered my camera once again and captured a sequence of images as she turned her head with eyes closed and slowly walked away.

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