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©
2001 |
Forest health demo project begins
A project that will demonstrate the effects of different types of forest management got underway last week in the Metolius Basin. The advocacy
group Friends of the Metolius, in partnership with the US Forest Service,
envisioned the Metolius Heritage Demonstration Project.
The project, located in the
vicinity of the junction of Roads 1419 and 1420 in the heart of Camp Sherman,
is made up of ten small units.
Treatment alternatives over
the next year will include thinning, prescribed fire, mowing, thinning
and larch restoration.
Larch restoration treatment
started as Redmond smoke jumpers pruned Western larch infected with mistletoe.
The jumpers scaled the larch and cut out infected or potentially infected
limbs.
The goal is to remove the
mistletoe, a fungus, so that it may not infect other nearby larch trees
and especially larch seedling. A second part of the larch restoration
will be prescribed burning of the area.
Larch likes bare mineral soil
to get started.
Smoke jumpers are highly skilled
at climbing trees. When they parachute into a fire and land in a tree,
they then rappel down to the fire.
After controlling the fire,
they must climb back up the tree to retrieve their parachute.
The next Metolius Heritage
Demonstration activity will be the mowing of several units this week.
Upon completion of all activities,
the public will have an opportunity to observe the reduction of trees
in an overcrowded forest, the reduction in disease, and the reduction
of fire hazards on the special units through the use of a variety of treatment
tools.
The public is welcome to watch
the progress at the demonstration sites.Questionsmay be addressed to www.metoliusfriends.org.
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