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Forest
Service readies prescribed burns Spring has officially
arrived and, with it, the Forest Service is studying its options for the
season's prescribed burns.
"As soon as conditions allow,
we'll start going," said Daryl Davis, Assistant Fire Management Officer
for the Sisters Ranger District.
"Dana Espinoza, our fuels
technician, was out checking planned burn areas," said Davis. "He said
it's still too damp to meet the conditions for these planned burns, but
we could start within the next few days. Of course, that all depends on
the weather."
The Forest Service is actively
engaged in an aggressive program of wildfire prevention that involves
thinning, mowing and controlled burns.
The focus of the effort is
being directed at areas where forestland borders population centers --
the wildland interface -- and the goal is to remove excess vegetation
that could fuel wildfires.
Davis reported that all the
slash piles on more than 2,500 acres of Sisters and Camp Sherman area
forestland were successfully burned in the fall burning cycle.
"We're thinning and piling
again, though," he said. Most of the new cutting is taking place in areas
along the Highway 20 corridor.
Davis cited areas near Sisters,
Crossroads and Tollgate among those currently undergoing fuels reduction
treatment.
Traditional tree cutting isn't
the only thinning technique being used in the woods.
"There's also some thinning
going on with our tree shearer machine," Davis said.
He described the machine as
a vehicle about the size of a Bobcat with tracks rather than wheels. The
machine grabs small trees with a set of arms and cuts them off near the
ground with a set of hydraulically operated shears. It is capable of cutting
trees up to about eight or nine inches in diameter and can carry about
six cut trees and leave them in a neat pile.
Davis indicated that the machine
is currently being used in flat, accessible areas near Black Butte Ranch
and George McAllister Road.
Virginia Gibbons, of the Prineville
office of the Ochoco and Deschutes National Forests, said that burning
is expected to continue through about May 15.
She added that, "Prescribed
burning is a carefully monitored activity that is done only during optimal
weather conditions that favor the best smoke dispersal possible."
Fire Management Officer Kevin
Donham said, "We target a certain amount of acres to burn and then try
our best to meet that goal while minimizing impact to local communities."
Meanwhile, spring preparations
for the burning program continue in the Sisters area.
"As soon as we get good weather
conditions," said Davis, "we're going to start."
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