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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
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contents of the on-line edition of The Nugget represent a selection
among the stories that appear in the weekly print edition. |
Forest
Service takes a cautious approach
Littering the
road's edge like so much roadkill are brown heaps of forest debris. Local
residents are wondering how much longer the piles will persist.
Jinny Pitman, Fire Prevention
and Education Specialist for the U.S. Forest Service says, "Mother Nature
has a role in all of this."
Pitman and her cohorts are
anxiously awaiting more precipitation.
"Even though we've had rain,
you can see that, just below the surface, it's still dry," she said.
Pitman is part of a team
of foresters who are working to make public forest lands safer through
the process of fuels treatment, a program that fights fire with fire.
Pitman stressed the multi-agency
aspect of the fall burning program and emphasized the role played by her
counterparts at the Oregon Department of Forestry.
"The first thing I want to
make clear," she said, "is that all of our burning on public lands is
in cooperation with the Oregon Department of Forestry."
Together, the two agencies
have plans to burn debris piles on more than 2,700 Sisters-area acres
of public land this season.
"We have no broadcast underburning
scheduled for this fall," Pitman said. Underburning employs low-intensity
fires to consume combustible materials on the forest floor without igniting
the forest canopy above.
The debris piles have been
previously stacked by Forest Service and ODF employees and contractors
as well as by inmate labor.
The use of inmates for fire
prevention labor in local forests has been increasingly successful in
recent years. Inmate labor has provided an economically efficient use
of resources while teaching minimum-risk inmates skills and work ethic
that may help them succeed in the outside world.
"Ignition of various hand
and machine pile locations will be determined by current and projected
weather conditions," Pitman said.
She listed waiting burn piles
in areas near Black Butte Ranch, Tollgate, Crossroads, Indian Ford, Suttle
Lake and the Highway 20 corridor.
"We are looking for a good
ground saturation before we get into Black Butte Ranch," she said.
"The people there are screaming
to get rid of those piles, but we don't want to take a chance. We're waiting
for good precipitation before we ignite those piles around communities."
Burning has already commenced
in some areas.
"We're already burning south
of Corbett Sno-Park and in the higher elevations where we've had more
moisture," Pitman said. "We're also burning near Camp Tamarack, so there
will be smoke in the Suttle Lake area through (this) week."
Pitman is hoping that a low
pressure system will bring more rain soon, so work can begin at lower
elevations.
Regarding the unsightly piles
along the highway she says, "It would be nice to light them now while
they're still dry so we can burn them hot and fast, but we have to be
careful. There's still a lot of potential for an escaped fire."
She points out that the hot
fires burn faster and cleaner with less smoke, but the foresters have
to balance that consideration with safety concerns.
There are manpower considerations,
too, since seasonal employees can only stay on the payroll for a fixed
amount of time.
"When the right weather does
come," she lamented, "Then we never have enough people."
Some of the burn piles are
from rehabilitation efforts following the Eyerly and Cache Mountain fires.
There are approximately 300
machine-stacked piles atop Green Ridge which are the product of Eyerly
rehabilitation and reconstruction of the Green Ridge fire break. It is
also likely that a timber sale will be generated from the Green Ridge
work.
Machine-stacked piles tend
to be larger and more dense than hand-stacked piles and burn hotter.
A number of machine piles
have been thrown up from rehabilitation work in the Cache Mountain fire
area, as well. Salvage of charred trees from that fire is still under
consideration, as officials weigh the options and try to apportion fiscal
and support resources.
Private lands affected by
the fire have already been salvaged.
A number of machine piles
in Camp Sherman's Heritage Demonstration Project are also awaiting the
torch.
Here again, weather conditions
will play a role. In addition to the moisture balance, forest officials
are also cognizant of the smoke issue.
"They have so many air inversions
in there," Pitman said, "we don't want to smoke them out." |
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