Fall Prescribed Fire Activities in the Bald Hills
Redwood National and State Parks plans to conduct a series of prescribed burns this fall in the prairies and oak woodlands of the Bald Hills east of Orick, California. The prescribed fire season in the parks begins in late September or early October as weather conditions permit.
This year fire will be used as a management tool in four specific burn units in the Bald Hills: Coyote, Child’s Hill, Lower Elk Camp, and South Boundary. The four units combined are approximately 1,950 acres.
For thousands of years, Yurok, Tolowa, Chilula, and Hupa people managed prairies, oak woodlands, and some coastal areas that are now within the parks with periodic fire to keep them open. Intentional burning provided grazing and hunting areas for elk and deer, maintained important resources like tanoak trees and various basket weaving materials, kept trail and travel corridors open, and lessened the prevalence of parasites like ticks in the prairies. Early European Americans who later ranched these same lands continued the practice of broadcast burning until it was outlawed by the state in the 1930s. Since then, many of the prairies and oak woodlands have become encroached with Douglas fir and other conifers which can eventually eliminate these important plant communities.
The park’s 2021 Fire Management Plan provides for the use of fire to restore natural and cultural processes, manage exotic plants and conifers encroaching into prairie and oak woodland plant communities, and to educate the public about the role of fire in the parks. The parks have successfully used prescribed fires to achieve these objectives since the early 1980s.
If you are in the parks over the next couple of months, there will likely be additional activity and equipment on and near Bald Hills Road. Smoke may linger on the roadways and traffic control may be in place. Please be cautious for your safety as well as the fire crews working on the prescribed burns.
For further information, please contact Bryan Boatman at (707) 496-0258.
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So what changed in the 1930s to eliminate prescibed burns? Probably the great fires of 1910 that burned over 3 million acres. Some of those fires that made that big fire started with backburns among other causes. Doing nothing is dangerous, doing something is dangerous. Some consistency and moderation of doing something but in balance is the best that can be expected. And “untouched nature” is not something compatible with human occupation and never was. But even now, the amount of forest fire is not as high as it was in the 1930s.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Fire_of_1910#:~:text=The%20Great%20Fire%20of%201910%20%28also%20commonly%20referred,British%20Columbia%2C%20in%20the%20summer%20of%201910.%20
https://theconversation.com/explainer-back-burning-and-fuel-reduction-20605
https://www.mdpi.com/2571-6255/3/3/32/htm
I’m all for this.
Now that it is fall, and the rain is starting, I wish I could safely burn my fields with a prescribed burn…
The invasive star thistle is getting very bad.
For us, the way we got rid of them was to pull as many as possible. I also suspect that mowing them before they seed helps. It took us at least 7 years from the first acknowledgement that we had a problem til the last lone star thistle tried to poke up its head…We pulled pickup loads. I can still taste the time I pulled a bunch with the family until our hands were stained yellow and then got something to eat, forgetting to wash my hands….yuck!!
You could – one option is to join the Humboldt County Prescribed Burn Association: https://humcopba.net/