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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. |
Teens
help protect burned forests Some
Central Oregon teenagers are putting their backs into heavy work this fall,
rehabilitating the forest burned by the B&B Complex Fire.
The Forest Service's Burned
Area Emergency Rehabilitation team (BAER) has contracted with the Central
Oregon Intergovernmental Council (COIC) to supply a work force of teens
who are not enrolled in high school.
Around the headwaters of Abbot
Springs, near Abbot Butte, three COIC teens and a crew leader are erecting
an A-frame fence to protect budding, green plant life from an elk herd.
This area near Camp Sherman
was burned particularly severely by the fires last summer.
All of the Forest Service
roads in the area are closed to the public. The closure is due to dangerous
trees -- trees that are burned so badly at the base that the structural
integrity of the tree is gone. Some of these trees are near the road,
creating a potential hazard when they could fall at anytime.
The COIC crew has obtained
special work access to the hard-hit Abbot Butte. There's not one unscorched
tree in the vicinity of the springs.
Jeremy Fields, a Reforestation
Technician for the Forest Service, explains, "There's a real problem with
the elk because there is not a lot for them to eat and they devastate
the only green."
The only visible new growth
is in these riparian zones.
"The goal here is just to
let this vegetation get established again," said Fields.
The Forest Service speculates
that the elk herd carries about 30 head. It is thought that a concentrated
population of cougars near Abbot Butte and the Doll Ranch has pushed the
elk onto the Warm Springs Reservation.
The teens work hard in a tough
environment -- all for school credit.
Josh Day, Youth Employment
Counselor for COIC, says, "About 20 percent of the students that come
over to us do the Work Education Program. They earn school credit coming
out here and doing work."
These teens do not receive
pay.
Upon arrival at the job site
on a recent morning, Day organized his crew. His three-man crew was in
good spirits.
There was no grumbling about
the hard work, the cold morning or the wet fencing material.
They immediately set to work
assembling the fence with three-inch diameter poles and fastening them
together with eight-inch, twisted galvanized spikes.
The A-frame design is intended
to trip the elk when they come in contact with the bottom rung of the
fence. If the fence was the usual vertical design, the elk could jump
over.
"We intend to just let the
riparian fencing fall over," said Fields. "It will stand for about five
years."
When the COIC crew broke for
lunch, everyone was still enthusiastic after a sweaty morning of fence
building.
Philip Doke, 16, thinks this
work is fun.
"It teaches me things I can
use later in life," he said.
Shawn Weight's brother told
him about the COIC program after he was kicked out of high school.
Joshua Daschunea said, "It's
fun. If it wasn't I wouldn't be here. I'm getting Science and Natural
Resources credits."
All three workers would like
to finish high school despite various setbacks. Joshua and Philip would
like to go to college. Shawn intends to join the Air Force. |
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