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2002 |
USFS
burning program heats up
The race is on to underburn thousands
of acres of local National Forest land before dry conditions set in for
the summer.
Mark Rapp, Assistant Fire
Management Officer for the Sisters Ranger District, said that the service's
current plans call for burning an estimated 4,000 acres this spring.
Prescribed underburning is
a process the Forest Service uses to reduce accumulations of forest vegetation
that might otherwise pose a danger of wildfire.
By controlling fire timing
and intensity, the Forest Service hopes to eliminate combustible fuels
on the forest floor that could cause hotter, uncontrolled fires during
the hot, dry days of summer.
Underburns are designed to
consume forest fuels close to the ground without harming mature trees.
Rapp said that the Forest
Service's continuing goal is to reduce the potential fire danger, particularly
in areas which are part of the urban interface.
As a result, smoke from the
projects will be readily noticeable to people who live in those areas.
"We will do door-to-door contacts
to notify some of the closest residents who might look out and see flames,"
Rapp said.
When winter conditions permitted,
Rapp and his fellow fire crew members burned hand-stacked piles and isolated
concentrations of dead vegetation.
Initiating underburns, however,
means that the burn program is shifting into high gear.
Most of the areas slated for
burning are south or west of town.
The area along the Squaw Creek
Irrigation Canal has been targeted before and will see more burning this
spring.
Units south of the Patterson
Ranch and west of the Weir Grade (on the way to Three Creek Lake) are
also slated to come under the torch.
Acreage near Tollgate and
Crossroads also made the list, as well as new sites along the Santiam
Highway corridor.
Rapp says that the individual
burn sites typically range from 30 to 100 acres.
Flames are likely to be seen
at the base of Black Butte, across the road from Black Butte Ranch, and
along "Road 11" on the opposite side of the butte.
Some burns will also be initiated
in more remote areas such as Jack Canyon and Green Ridge.
Last fall's sudden transition
from dry weather to heavy snow limited chances to burn hand-stacked piles
left over from forest thinning projects. The window of opportunity for
those burns has already passed.
"We'll have to wait until
fall on the rest of the Indian Ford piles and some around Black Butte
Ranch," Rapp said.
Residents with questions about
burning schedules or areas to be burned may call Daryl Davis at 549-7643.
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