COMMUNITY TUESDAY, JUNE 29, 2021 FIRE “Over the course of my career, my tolerance for red trees is a lot more than it used to be because I know that’s how it has to be.” Continued from Page A1 Lewis thrusts his arm into a spray of green foliage that’s bursting from a patch of black ground. This is a willow too. A new willow, fresh as let- tuce plucked from a garden, and about knee-high on Lewis’ tan pants. Its fl exible shoots and lance-shaped leaves have risen from the ash since fl ames swept through here almost two months to the day. That was no ordinary fi re. Lewis, who most often tries to douse fl ames as an assis- tant fi re management offi cer for the Wallowa-Whitman National Forest’s Whitman Ranger District, was on that April day in charge of kin- dling fi res. And today he and the others have returned to have a look at the early results of their handiwork. During two days in mid- April, Lewis oversaw the crews that lit prescribed fi res that covered about 1,100 acres, mainly on the north side of the reservoir but also a section on the south side, near the Forest Service’s Southwest Shore camp- ground. The fi res had multiple pur- poses. A primary goal was to remove accumulations of dry, dead grass and layers of des- iccated pine needles, Lewis said. That combustible debris could fuel a wildfi re during summer, when fl ames would be much more diffi cult to control than the April blazes, which were ignited while the ground was moist and a few snowdrifts still lingered in sheltered clefts among the pines. Although the April fi res were intended to protect the mature, second-growth pines that predominate in these relatively low-elevation for- ests — Phillips Reservoir is at about 4,100 feet — the blazes were also supposed to kill some trees, said Hawkins, fi re staff offi cer for the Wallowa- Whitman. The “prescription” for the fi res — a list of the goals that managers hoped to achieve — included killing from 30% to 70% of the “regeneration,” Hawkins said. Those are the seedlings and saplings growing among the bigger pines, some of lat- — Steve Hawkins, fi re staff offi cer, Wallowa- Whitman National Forest Jayson Jacoby/Baker City Herald Trevor Lewis, assistant fi re management offi cer for the Wallowa-Whitman National Forest’s Whitman Ranger District, shows how tall willow shoots grew after a pre- scribed fi re burned through this area along Deer Creek in mid-April. Lewis visited the site on June 22. ter being 18 inches or more in diameter. A century and more ago, before the Forest Service and other agencies started ag- gressively fi ghting wildfi res, few of those little trees likely would have survived much beyond the seedling stage, Hawkins said. That’s because fi res, most of them started by lightning, swept through the forests ap- proximately every seven to 15 years, he said — an estimate based on studies of the fi re scars left on old pines in other areas with similar character- istics. Those historical fi res posed little threat to big pondero- sas with their thick bark, Hawkins said. They were also protected by their lack of limbs for the fi rst 30 or more feet of trunk, depriving fl ames of a “ladder” to climb, spreading fi re into the trees’ more vulnerable crowns. Those past fi res had similar effects to modern prescribed fi res, in that they generally stayed on the ground or close to it, devouring ground fuel but sparing the larger trees. By largely excluding fi re from these forests for much of the 20th century, the Forest Service and other agencies allowed younger trees to grow in much greater density than in the past. In some areas this understory of smaller trees are mainly fi rs, but around Phillips Reservoir most of the conifers, both young and older, are pon- derosas. Regardless of species, these smaller trees can serve as those ladder fuels that threaten even the tallest tree. The agency has over the past 30 years or so started to try to reverse these effects, and prescribed fi re has been one of its primary tools, said Cikanek, ranger for the Whit- man District. For some areas north of Phillips Reservoir, this April’s fi res were the third since the early 1990s. “When you skip a century, it takes a few steps to get back,” Cikanek said. But there is the matter of those reddish-orange needles, so distinct amid the green backdrop. Cikanek said he’s pleased to see that the April fi res killed many of the smaller pines. Removing these trees, along with the surface layers of grass and pine needles, will reduce the severity of any summer wildfi re that starts here, he said. Hawkins agreed. “Over the course of my career, my tolerance for red trees is a lot more than it Jayson Jacoby/Baker City Herald Forest Service employees pruned burned limbs from some young ponderosa pines near Mowich Loop picnic area on the north side of Phillips Reservoir. The trees were burned during a prescribed fi re in mid-April. Don’t text and drive... you won’t have to come see us! BAKER CITY HERALD — A3 used to be,” he said. But Cikanek acknowledges that the April blazes also scorched, in some cases likely lethally, some mature pines. Cikanek said the prescrip- tion for the fi res called for up to 10% mortality among older trees. The actual death toll will be well below that level, he said. Some trees with reddened needles will survive, Lewis said. Many of these trees didn’t actually burn, he said — the discoloration was caused by radiant heat from the fl ames below. Trees that still have green needles for the top 25% or so of the crown probably will survive, Lewis said. He concedes that this year’s se- vere drought will increase the mortality rate, however. On June 22, while walking among the pines near Mowich Loop, the Wallowa-Whitman picnic area beside Highway 7, Lewis pointed to scorched trees that already have new green needles. Deer Creek fl ows a few hundred yards east of the picnic area. The stream, which heads high in the Elkhorn Moun- tains, was lined with willows and alders. The April pre- scribed fi re, spurred by gusty winds, burned hot here. That’s not surprising, Lewis said. The creekside willows and alders had become “deca- dent,” he said — a term in this case meaning the thick- ets had a lot of old, dead wood and relatively fewer new, succulent shoots. Although the fi re left those unsightly black skeletons, Lewis said those are only the remnants of that dead wood. Many deciduous trees, including water-loving species such as willows and alders, are invigorated by fi re. As proof, he points to the expanse of knee-high, glossy green willow shoots that line Deer Creek. “Disturbance is what causes the fl ush of new growth,” Cikanek said. The April fi re also spread through a grove of aspen just east of the Mowich Loop parking lot. Lewis said that within three weeks of the fi re, aspen shoots were standing three inches tall in the grove. Jayson Jacoby/Baker City Herald New sprouts of bitterbrush grow from the base of a burned shrub on June 22 at Union Creek campground. The bitterbrush burned during a prescribed fi re April 15. forest can still benefi t from prescribed fi re, most notably the reduction in the fuel load on the ground. On the north side of the reservoir these small trees are part of the understory that prescribed fi re is sup- posed to thin out. But here, near the camp- ground, almost all the trees are small, and they need to be protected. To that end, prior to the prescribed fi re, workers pruned the lower limbs that could serve as ladder fuels, Lewis said. He said similar work — pruning followed by pre- scribed burning — is planned along the Forest Service road that runs along the south side of the reservoir and leads to both Southwest Shore and Millers Lane campgrounds. This project not only is intended to reduce the risk of wildfi res on the national forest, but also to help protect the many parcels of private property just south of the road. Union Creek campground This Forest Service camp- ground on the northeast side of Phillips Reservoir, a mile or so from Mason Dam, is the most popular recreation site in the area. It’s one of a few Forest Service sites in the re- gion that has campsites with electric, water and sewer con- nections for RVs and trailers. Hawkins said the Wallowa- Whitman has undertaken multiple projects since the 1990s to reduce the wildfi re risk in the campground, including thinning the pines and lighting prescribed fi res. Lewis said the camp- ground is the last area that was ignited on April 15, the fi rst day of prescribed burn- ing, and for a couple reasons, fl ames didn’t spread as South of the reservoir rapidly as other areas. Lewis strolls into the pine First, the humidity was a forest just west of the Forest bit higher later in the day. Service’s Southwest Shore Second, the forest fl oor campground. inside the campground has The situation is quite dif- comparatively less fuel, a ferent here than it is north of situation Lewis explains the reservoir. with a chuckle. A wildfi re in the late 1980s “It’s a campground, and ev- killed most of the pines near ery little kid picks up sticks the campground, and the For- for a campfi re,” he said. est Service planted ponderosa Kids also roam among the seedlings. pines. Lewis said this younger Although the prescribed fi re burned before the camp- ground had opened for the season, campers who arrived saw patches of black ground and pines with reddened needles. Cikanek said he under- stands that burning in a campground — even a con- trolled fi re that’s intended to protect the place from devastating wildfi res — can bother some visitors. Aron Grief isn’t among those. Grief, who lives in Molalla, southeast of Portland, was walking to the campground’s fi sh-cleaning station with a stringer of rainbow trout when he passed the group of Forest Service employees looking at the forest. “Are you going to do more burning?” Grief asked. “I know why you did it.” Cikanek told Grief that there wouldn’t be any pre- scribed fi res during summer, what with the higher fi re danger and the campground being open. Grief said he appreciates that the Forest Service is trying to reduce the fi re danger in the campground. He pointed out the clumps of Idaho fescue, a native bunchgrass, growing where the fl ames were two months ago. “It’s green,” Grief said. While driving through the campground on the way back to Highway 7, Hawkins stops the Forest Service pickup truck to have a look at a clump of bitterbrush, a shrub that is an important source of winter forage for deer and, to a lesser extent, elk. In common with decidu- ous trees and certain grass- es, bitterbrush is invigorat- ed by fi res of relatively low severity, such as prescribed fi res, Hawkins said. He examines a patch of bitterbrush that burned in the April fi re. At the base of the black- ened shrub he points to green shoots a few inches tall. That new growth will be palatable to deer and elk, Hawkins said, and more ac- cessible to the animals than the spiny, thick-limbed shrub that burned. EASTERN OREGON 2021 • Lumber • Plywood • Building Materials • Hardware • Paint • Plumbing • Electrical And much more! 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