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A little rain would go a long ways to curtail the severity and intensity of wildfires, no?
In the bigger picture, the amount of forest land that burned was pretty small as a long-term percentage and is about what you would expect with a forest that turns over every few hundred years.
10 to 15 % of what burned being considered for salvage is a small amount.
Maybe not.
How much of the wood is even worth salvaging? How much is within roadless MA's? How much would it cost to build roads to reach much of the burn? How much is within riparian areas? How unstable are the soils?
I'd have to see it before making unfounded declarations like you do.
Maybe not.
How much of the wood is even worth salvaging? How much is within roadless MA's? How much would it cost to build roads to reach much of the burn? How much is within riparian areas? How unstable are the soils?
I'd have to see it before making unfounded declarations like you do.
Immediately around Seeley? Geeze BHR, are you even familiar with the area that burned? Look at it on Google earth - section upon section of heavily roaded and heavily logged forest. They still couldn't put the fire out.Rob,
The forest immediately around Seely Lake such as the cross country ski course were thinned. That and having a big lake on the other side is why they were able to defend the town from the Rice Ridge fire. Where the fire was able to burn out of control was in dense thickets of lynx "rabbitat". So much for the rabbitat.
So in this release by Senator Tester in 2013, are we being suckered as well?
https://www.tester.senate.gov/?p=press_release&id=3035
Immediately around Seeley? Geeze BHR, are you even familiar with the area that burned? Look at it on Google earth - section upon section of heavily roaded and heavily logged forest. They still couldn't put the fire out.
I'm familiar with the Seely area Rob. Kind of hard to put out fires in dense overstocked regen. This article shows examples of thinned forest side by side with over stocked regen. Read it. This is the direction we are heading to on federal forests, like it or not.
http://www.theforestblog.com/stewardship/#more-684
That dense crap is called rabbitat, Rob. It gets litigated all the time. When's the last time you went to Morrell Falls? Dense before the fire. Probably pretty bleak today.
Here's another good read for you Rob to help educate your stubborn mind.......
http://www.theforestblog.com/collaborate/#more-703