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The on-line Nugget does not feature all the stories of our print edition. For all the news, subscribe here.
©
2002 Display
Advertising The
contents of the on-line edition of The Nugget represent a selection
among the stories that appear in the weekly print edition. |
Reseeding
operation launched The legacy of
this summer's wildfires continued last week, as an emergency fire rehabilitation
crew labored to protect severely burned slopes of the Eyerly fire north
of Sisters to reduce the threat of soil erosion.
More than 900 bags of winter
wheat and annual rye totaling 47,000 pounds were seeded by helicopter
onto steep and remote drainages of Spring and Street Creek above Lake
Billy Chinook. The plants are expected to persist for three to five years
and then die out, acting as a "nurse crop" for native plants recolonizing
the area.
The project required a complex
dance of aviation skill, planning, ground support, and attention to safety.
A powerful Jet Ranger B-3
Helicopter from Henderson Aviation of Junction City worked in orchestration
with the Prineville Interagency Helitack crew and Sisters Ranger District
personnel to accomplish the work.
Ace pilot Brad Larsen impressed
observers with his precision flying, which required up to 20 landings
and takeoffs a day with a dangling seeding bucket loaded with 500 pounds
of seed.
Each landing required a careful
sequence in which the pilot landed the bucket on the helispot, then gingerly
maneuvered the helicopter to the ground without tangling in a confusion
of hanging cables. With rotor wash whipping the air, the support crew
quickly approached the ship in single file, emptied heavy bags of seed
into the apparatus, then retreated to a safety zone.
Leaning out the doorless ship,
Larsen repeated the sequence in reverse, watching cables as the helicopter
slowly lifted off the ground and the bucket became airborne before he
roared off over the blackened treetops.
Helicopters and people can
be a dangerous combination.
During initial safety briefings
Larsen matter-of-factly explained where he would try to crash the helicopter
if he lost power during takeoff so crews could establish safety zones
to avoid that area.
"Then come find me and hopefully
I'll just be mad and brushing off my flight suit," he said.
After two days of work, a
mechanical difficulty with the ship required a Long Ranger L3 helicopter
to be flown in from the Willamette Valley. The disabled Jet Ranger is
at Sisters Airport awaiting repairs.
Thirty-year helicopter veteran
George Yocom and co-foreman Josh Schraeder oversaw the safety of ground
support. Schraeder explained a tremendous amount of thought goes into
each mission to ensure everyone goes home well at the end of the day.
"It's like working under a
giant running lawn mower," he said. "What's not dangerous about helicopters?'
It's a legitimate question.
Something as innocent as an empty seed bag released into the whipping
rotors or a tangled bucket cable could mean disaster.
"But I enjoy the challenge,"
Schraeder said. "You see how much planning goes into it, thinking about
everything that could go wrong, trying to anticipate it, mitigate the
risks, and eliminate those that could cause accidents."
Seeding projects such as this
one were once routinely prescribed after wildfires, but these days seeding
is done only in specific situations with high risk of soil loss.
The team of Burned Area Rehab
experts which evaluated the Eyerly Fire determined that approximately
one third of the area burned at a high enough intensity to turn top soil
layers, plant roots, and seeds to ash.
A long recovery period will
be required to regrow vegetation that will hold the soil in place. It
is estimated that in the severely burned areas up to five tons of soil
per acre could erode and wash down steep hillsides into the Metolius River,
Lake Billy Chinook and Perry South campground.
In contrast, the watershed
of the Cache Mountain fire near Black Butte Ranch was predicted to recover
ground vegetation rapidly on its own and has low risk of severe soil loss
because the more porous soils absorb water easily. Only small scattered
areas burned hot enough to cause soil damage.
No seeding is planned for
Cache Mountain.
Sisters Ranger District personnel
have been working since the smoke cleared to prepare the Eyerly area for
winter snows, spring snow melt, and next summer's rain storms. Roads have
been armored for increased runoff with larger culverts, drain dips and
ditches.
Thousands of burned trees
have been dropped across slopes in steep draws to slow water and soil
flows. In concert with the seeding, these measures are predicted by the
rehab planning team to have a 70-80 percent probability of success in
reducing catastrophic slides into local waters.
To test that prediction, Deschutes
National Forest Hydrologists and an Oregon State University graduate student,
Shelly Moore, are busy installing sediment fences in rehab areas. This
device measures soil erosion and will help the Forest Service understand
whether certain combinations of rehab measures are more effective than
others.
Learning from the fires of
2002 will continue for decades.
The rehab activities have
also been a training opportunity for college students like Sisters locals
Garrett Brink and Nate Goodwin.
The two assisted the helitack
crew in ferrying seed and their work in rehab tree felling provided them
with intimate knowledge of the burned area.
Brink flew an orientation
flight with the helicopter to point out key landmarks to the pilot. In
spite of having to help lift over 900 seed bags, Goodwin said he enjoyed
the exposure to helitack work
"Its been a great experience,"
he said. "This is the first time I've gotten to work around helicopters
and that's cool. I've learned you can't be too careful."
Maret Pajutee is a Sisters
Ranger District Ecologist. |
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