Los Angeles Times

Sequoia park burn is put off

Planned fire in Giant Forest area postponed for second time after slow spread

- By Joseph Serna

A National Park Service plan to set fire to an ancient sequoia grove in the western Sierra Nevada has been canceled for the second time this year, further delaying a delicate forestry operation aimed at triggering new growth near the world’s largest tree.

The controlled burn in Sequoia and Kings Canyon national parks was expected to blacken 483 acres in the Giant Forest, a cathedral-like grove of sequoias straddling Generals Highway. The carefully tended fire was expected to last seven days, but was canceled Friday after a test fire failed to consume vegetation fast enough for the plan to work, according to Mike Theune, a fire informatio­n officer with the National Park Service.

California’s famed General Sherman Tree and other giant sequoias have evolved in a manner that allows them to not only survive periodic wildfires, but also thrive in their aftermath. The towering trees are wrapped in a thick, fire-resistant bark, and their cones release seeds when exposed to heat. Fire also helps to clear the forest floor and expose nutrients that allow the fallen seeds to germinate.

Since the 1960s, the National Forest Service has used intentiona­lly set fires to foster new growth of giant sequoias. Before conducting a controlled burn, however, operation managers have to consider the moisture content of the vegetation that will burn, wind conditions and the chance that firefighte­rs might be called to help out on wildfires elsewhere in the state, Theune said.

Although vegetation appeared to be dry enough for a controlled burn during the planning stage, a test fire on Friday did not burn as intensely as officials hoped, Theune said.

Accelerati­ng the controlled burn with drip torches — devices that drop burning diesel fuel and gasoline onto dry brush — would have been too dangerous for firefighte­rs and would have increased the risk of the fire getting out of control, Theune said. The goal is to have a moderately burning fire that clears overgrowth and makes room for the next generation of plant life, among other things.

“The reason we don’t try to force it and use more firefighte­rs with drip torches is it comes back to safety,” Theune said. “Are we going to put firefighte­rs at risk? It’s your return on investment. What is going to give us the best outcome that’s not only safe for our crews but also what is healthiest for the forest?”

The Park Service will monitor conditions going forward to determine when they can launch the prescribed fire for the Giant Forest. No timetable was immediatel­y set, officials said Sunday.

Sequoia and Kings Canyon officials deliberate­ly burn between 1,100 and 1,500 acres of forestland annually to manage forest health. But one of its other benefits — mitigating wildfires — has taken on greater importance as California experience­s a surge in deadly and destructiv­e blazes.

Not all federal lands are suited for prescribed burns, Theune said. Some landscapes might be too rugged to manage safely and others are too overgrown so officials have to wait for Mother Nature to take the lead.

The Giant Forest has been under a prescribed fire regimen for decades. So, even though officials have had to cancel burns twice this year, it’s not as bad as some areas and can be revisited at a future date, Theune said. Assigning a never-before-treated area for a controlled burn can take years because it has to be surveyed for relevant infrastruc­ture and archaeolog­ical or historical artifacts as well as environmen­tal impacts, funding, weather and logistics.

For the controlled burn in the Sequoia and Kings Canyon parks, the plan was for the fire to chew through most of the fuel bed and to knock down dead trees and snags. But all of the necessary conditions have to be in place for the burn to be most effective.

“We’re giving a prescripti­on the way a doctor gives a prescripti­on of medication,” Theune said. “We’re trying to work within the prescripti­on to get desired outcomes and effects.”

The prescribed burn, called the Sherman Prescribed Fire because of its proximity to the famous tree, was originally scheduled to take place in June. It was called off because smoke from the fire would not have dispersed adequately and would have choked surroundin­g communitie­s.

Friday’s attempt was called off after crews burned 3 acres outside the grove and found that “10-hour fuels” — items slightly denser than grass, like sticks and twigs, that take up to 10 hours to completely consume — were not helping the fire spread. The winds were too light to help, Theune said. Park officials spent the weekend monitoring the fire and let it burn itself out.

Clearing the forest of dead trees also helps to minimize wildfire behavior. That point was effectivel­y illustrate­d in 2015 when the 150,000-acre Rough fire entered Sequoia National Park.

Thanks to a regimen of prescribed burns in Sequoia and Kings Canyon parks since the 1960s, there’s been little undergrowt­h to exacerbate a fire. The trees are also adequately spaced with enough room to grow and bark thick enough to prevent serious damage, Theune said.

When flames from the Rough fire reached Grant Grove, a community of towering sequoias on the park’s western edge near the Fresno and Tulare county line, the trees were able to resist the flames.

That’s because those areas of Sequoia and Kings Canyon national parks are regularly treated with fires as part of their ecosystem — preferably through natural dry lightning strikes but if not, then by park firefighte­rs, according to the Park Service.

Flames will rake the landscape, reducing competitio­n for precious resources and burn open holes in the canopy, giving saplings an opportunit­y to soak up the sun. Although full-grown sequoias have bark thick enough to withstand a fiery onslaught, they also use the heat to dry out and open their seed cones to spawn future generation­s.

Park officials treat different parts of the forest every year and will treat the same area only once every five to 20 years, depending on the history of fire in that particular area, Theune said.

But it wasn’t always this way. Following the Big Blowup fire in 1910 that scorched more than 3 million acres and killed 85 people in Washington, Idaho and Montana, the federal government adopted a strict extinguish­all-fires policy in its jurisdicti­on.

It wasn’t until the 1960s, when officials noticed that there were no young sequoias growing among the ancient behemoths, that the agency reassessed its approach. The Park Service now relies on fire scars visible in tree rings to determine how often fires burned through a particular area and tries to mirror that cycle in a controlled way, Theune said.

“Being able to restore low-intensity fire to the landscape not only protects these special areas, it’s really beneficial when there’s a wildfire,” Theune said. “It’s a reset for the forest.”

 ?? Tomas Ovalle For The Times ?? A TEST BLAZE showed conditions weren’t right for a larger prescribed fire in Sequoia and Kings Canyon national parks.
Tomas Ovalle For The Times A TEST BLAZE showed conditions weren’t right for a larger prescribed fire in Sequoia and Kings Canyon national parks.
 ?? Tomas Ovalle For The Times ?? FIREFIGHTE­R Dave Purcell helps with the Sherman Prescribed Fire. Fire is essential for sequoias to thrive.
Tomas Ovalle For The Times FIREFIGHTE­R Dave Purcell helps with the Sherman Prescribed Fire. Fire is essential for sequoias to thrive.

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