In my years covering the fires, I've seen so many remarkable people doing
great and honorable things protecting where we live and play. I never
have, nor will put down the people doing such a service to us. They put
their lives on the line for us on a regular basis.
That said, there seems to be an incredible amount of money being spent on
fighting fires this year. Of course, we had a very wet winter last year
which makes for a very busy fire season.
What seems to be sticking in my mind is the price being paid fighting fires in
Wilderness areas.
I am in agreement that vast areas of forest need to be allowed to burn
naturally, but I'm wondering about the state of our Wilderness areas.
I'm not really a wilderness type of guy, I'll admit. I seldom go hiking,
and am not into mountain climbing or any of the other wilderness type
activities.
Earlier this year, while at the Black Crater Fire near Sisters, Oregon, I had
the chance to hike six or seven miles into the wilderness area there.
Conditions were, to put it mildly, sickening. Dead and downed beetle kill
areas were everywhere. In places 80 and 90 percent of the trees were
dead. Bark off, grey in color, the forest was a catastrophe waiting to
happen. Those trees that weren't in the process of dying had been dead
for years. To make matters worse, the wilderness area borders areas where a
great number of people live. No buffer area, just some imaginary line
where wilderness supposedly stops and civilization starts.
I've seen a high number of fire reports throughout the west, describing the
problems faced on individual fires. The number of fires burning in
beetle kill and dead and downed fuel seems quite high.
We get reports on the state of the fires burning in our forests, but what do
we know about the forests that aren't burning yet? It seems that too
many of our forests need work, that they have been left "au natural"
for too long.
What I'm saying might be a contradiction in terms, but a dying forest full of
dead dry trees, no matter how natural, does no one any good. There are
too many people living in forest settings to just let catastrophic fires burn
without intervention. The fact that we are spending millions of dollars
fighting fires according to some random "Wilderness Area"
restrictions proves just that.
We need to find out the state of our forests. We need to find out how
much "wilderness" costs us. The way we manage our wilderness
areas is no more natural than the way we manage our other forests, it merely
further restricts the use of those forests.
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