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Firebreaks are just my attempt to do something against wild fire, rather do nothing. I burned off a Blue Grama Native Grass plantation to renew its growth and to kill the volunteer alder brush spreading through it. The evident snow
line on the left is a 800-yard long firebreak protecting several
thousand trees of many different varieties planted in the last 14 years; on the far right is a township
roadbed that acts as a firebreak as well. |
After last year's many Red Flag warnings, I keep an eye out for the weak links in our own chain of firebreaks I've made. For the last couple years, I've renewed our firebreaks, for stalling the progression of an unexpected grassland wildfire.
Our firebreaks are typically 20-feet wide and up to hundreds of yards long. The one below, borders a county ditch on the right, and planted tree rows on the left. Should the dead grass & cattails in the ditch catch fire with a good wind behind it, the fire would rapidly spread unabated into the grass in the tree rows if not for the expanse of the tilled soil of the firebreak. However, given perfect conditions for a wildfire of low humidity into the twenties and teens, combined with sunlight, high temperatures, and high winds, this firebreak still isn't enough to stop the spread of airborne embers.
A neighbor a mile away has a tree plantation too; his firebreaks are 8-10-feet wide and snake throughout his plantation. Our situations are different; in as much as their land is sheltered by neighboring woodlands of other landowners, whereas we have open farm fields on three sides where winds can build; the fourth side is more sheltered as it adjoins a wetland and woodlands.
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| I protect utility posts like this one, when I'm going to do a burn, by burning or tilling around them first so they're not damaged. |
There are two 'weak links' to my chain of firebreaks. One is the wetland in the northwest corner at the intersection of the county road and the cemetery road. And the other one is the wetland east and south of our house. I try to minimize fire danger by burning the creek banks closest to our house as soon as I can in the spring. I don't burn the whole of the creek basin as it would be such an inferno it would take firefighters to extinguish it, I imagine.
The second weak link is where the wetland adjoins the tree rows on its southeast side. Using the tractor and bush mower last fall, I cut down much of the brush and sedge grass down north of the trees, about ten feet wide; not as much as I'd like.
I wanted to burn the dry cattails and sedge grass out of the wetland this spring, and tried burning the ditch leading to it a few times but the elements were against me, like too many cold cloudy days and excessive moisture. I didn't want to risk burning the tamaracs, spruce, and birch growing along its northern edges either although the ground around them was dotted with snow and open water filled the ditch there. My confidence waned when I thought about how things can quickly get away from you then regret not asking someone for help.
One of my neighbors answered my voicemail inquiry about assisting me burn this area, and said he'd meet me on the cemetery road, a mile and a half away, in fifteen minutes. I wasn't prepared for that so soon; I had all my gear, but not loaded on my four-wheeler. So just being thankful for his help, I jumped to the task of topping off the backpack fire pump bags as I hurriedly got my boots on and repacked the contents of my ATV utility box I had bolted on the 4-wheeler's rear rack.
Lifting the three 49 lb backpacks into the utility box, I stood them up, side-by-side against the open box lid, at the same time thinking how I was going to manage carrying, in addition, a 20-lb tank of propane and a blowtorch with a ten-foot hose attached to it used to set a running fire. Pushed for time, I decided I'd come back for it, by shortcut, if necessary, having easily started fires with wood kitchen matches; this one should be easy too ...
Making a quick look about the place for what I needed with me, I started the four-wheeler, reversed, and sped quickly up the slope to get where I was going -- with 147-pounds of backpack fire pumps and gear leaning against lid -- when it all suddenly lunged backwards against the lid and ripped the box off the rack spilling the three backpacks and all accompanying gear onto the ground behind me. SHIT!
I called Ron and told him I'd be a few minutes late ...
Grabbing the backpacks, one by one, I loaded them back on the fractured rack, noting one of them was now leaking. (Don't worry Joe, it wasn't yours.) I strapped them to the rack the best I could, then set the utility box off to the side out of the way. I made one last look of the scattered things, and left the yard in High gear.
An apology probably wasn't necessary. Excess verbiage about what I intended to do and where I intended to start met Ron's understanding of all things combustible as a professional welder in his past life and a known grass fire lighter in his present life; (owing to our shared Palm-blood affinity for such things) He turned to a small box in the back of his Ranger, opened it, and said "Yah, I t'ink you need a beer, den."
Feeling confident there was no immediate fire danger, and accepting that throwing matches wasn't going to do the trick fast enough I called Ron to tell him I was going back home to get the tank of propane and the blow torch; I'd take the short cut back through the woods than out to the county road and around; it took all of maybe ten minutes.




ReplyDeletePaint it black, as the Animals sang it.