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Homecoming, reunion and so much more at the Christmas Tree Lane lighting ceremony

Tall trees with Christmas lights lit up. Tons of people are taking pictures.
Cedar trees in Christmas Tree Lane are lit up at Saturday's lighting ceremony.
(
Matt Ballinger
/
LAist
)

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Listen 2:35
We take you to the Christmas Tree Lane lighting ceremony, a year after the Eaton Fire
Thousands gathered along Santa Rosa Avenue in Altadena on Saturday night for the annual tradition. Josie Huang reports from the event.

"3... 2... 1..."

Voices rang out in unison until the nearly mile-long row of cedar trees along Santa Rosa Avenue burst with color.

The Christmas Tree Lane lighting is Altadena’s kickoff to the holidays, a 105-year-old tradition that attracts tens of thousands of visitors every year.

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And it was all that on Saturday night.

After the Eaton Fire, though, the celebration was more for many who attended. Many things about the lighting remained the same: speeches by dignitaries, a performance by the high school drumline.

But so much was different. A tree just off the lane was lit in white with 19 green lights honoring every person who died in the fire.

A tree with Christmas lights hung on it. Most of the lights are yellow, except for a number of them which are green.
A tree off the Christmas Tree Lane was lit in white with 19 green lights honoring every person who died in the fire.
(
Josie Huang
/
LAist
)

And during the ceremony, a minute and 19 seconds of silence was observed, led by the night’s emcee, actor Edward James Olmos.

LAist was at Saturday night's lighting event.

Megan Murdock

A woman in a blue hat is next to a man with a beard. The photo is taken around dust. Big, tall trees line the street behind the couple.
Longtime Altadena resident Megan Murdock and her partner Steven Valle.
(
Fiona Ng
/
LAist
)
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Saturday marked longtime Altadena resident Megan Murdock's very first outing.

"I love Christmas Tree Lane, but I've never been to the lighting event," she said. " This felt like the year to show up and represent."

As the first anniversary of the Eaton Fire approaches, Murdock said it's been amazing to see the community rebuild, even though the scars are still raw.

"Through the rebuilding, there were really hard days, there's going be more really hard days," she said. "But today's a good day."

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Seamus Bozeman

A man with reddish shoulder length hair, and a mustache. He is wearing a blue hoodie and smiling at the camera.
Seamus Bozeman and his family lost their home in Altadena.
(
Fiona Ng
/
LAist
)
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Seamus Bozeman will always call Altadena home.

He and his family lost their house in the Eaton Fire. But every chance he gets, Bozeman (a former LAist intern) can be found hanging out in his old haunts.

"I come back and shop at the shops as much as I can, eat from the restaurants here," he said. "I love this place so much."

A photo of tall trees with Christmas lights. A huge number of people are on the street.
Christmas Tree Lane lighting ceremony on Saturday.
(
Fiona Ng
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LAist
)

He said the tree-lighting ceremony he grew up knowing was a quaint, neighborhood affair.

" With this whole festival and everything because of the fire, I don't know, it's not the same for me," he said.

But change, he knows, is inevitable.

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" I'm hoping it's for the better," Bozeman said. "But one thing I do know is that we'll be closer as a community because of this fire."

Patricia Valencia

Two women wearing beanies are standing behind a festive scene
Patricia Valencia (R) and her friend at the Christmas Tree Lane lighting ceremony.
(
Josie Huang
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LAist
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For Patricia Valencia, who lost her home in the fire, Saturday night's event was a reunion.

"I saw my neighbor for the first time since we evacuated," she said. "It was emotional! I gave him a hug, and I was like, I think I'm gonna cry because I haven't seen you since that night that we left."

Greg Demus

A man wearing glasses and a yellow Lakers beanie holding a bag of kettle corn.
Christmas Tree Lane resident Greg Demus.
(
Fiona Ng
/
LAist
)

Greg Demus lives right on Christmas Tree Lane. For him, the event is an annual ritual.

" I've been coming here all my life," he said.

But after the fire, few things are a given.

" I wasn't quite sure what to expect," Demus said of this year's ceremony. "But it's good to see so many people come back to try to celebrate Altadena and keep Altadena strong."

Howard and Linella Raff

A man in a man and glasses. And a woman with wavy hear standing next to each other.
Howard Raff and his wife Linella at Saturday's Christmas Tree Lane lighting ceremony.
(
Josie Huang
/
LAist
)

Howard Raff and his wife Linella are renting outside of Altadena while their home is being remediated.

"Coming back, you just want it to be what it was, and you don't know what it's going to be like. So having this was kind of an anchor of something that you knew was going to be there," Linella said.

Marguerite Lockwood de Jauregui

A woman in black hair holding a clipboard with a photograph.
Marguerite Lockwood de Jauregui holds up a photocopy of the house in Altadena she lived in for three years, at the corner of Santa Rosa Avenue and East Mariposa Street where she is standing.
(
Fiona Ng
/
LAist
)

Marguerite Lockwood de Jauregui and her husband arrived at Christmas Tree Lane on Saturday in the early afternoon.

As soon as they were able to enter the area, the two set up their chairs at the corner of Santa Rosa Avenue and Mariposa Street.

A shot of two street signs at an intersection at night: Mariposa Street and Santa Rosa Avenue.
The intersection of Mariposa Street and Santa Rosa Avenue at Christmas Tree Lane
(
Fiona Ng
/
LAist
)

The lot on that corner now sits razed and empty. But before the fire, it was the house where de Jauregui had lived for three years after college. A place where she built lifelong friendships with her roommates.

"It was such great memories and a great camaraderie," she said.

Altadena, she remembered, was vibrant and free-spirited.

 "It was a really close-knit community," she said. "When you go further down Fair Oaks, you could go to the movies and dinner. You get together with friends in their historical homes, and we'd all sit around and play music."

A clipboard with a photocopy of a house.
Marguerite Lockwood de Jauregui brought with her a photocopy of the Altadena house she stayed at.
(
Fiona Ng
/
LAist
)

She returned to Christmas Tree Lane on Saturday to honor those formative years — and brought along images and drawings of the house that burned down.

"It was almost like claiming a bit of my own personal history back," she said.

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