It does make me wonder how the forest floor used to look with more frequent fires, and what that meant for air quality, if lightning caused fires were burning a large fraction of the forest floor every year. (20%, 50%?)
They probably happened with more frequency and less intensity. We've been suppressing forest fires for decades; in regions where there isn't much timber harvesting, that amounts to a lot of built up fuel. It also was never as important back then, people didn't have multi million dollar properties at stake.Somehow this smoke seems to really aggravate my body these days.
We have whole house AC, with a great electrostatic air filter. After a recent local and smokey fire, I broke down and bought five 20" MERV13 carbon impregnated air filters to add to a box fan for better smoke removal. I plan on duct taping it together until I see how it does at improving the indoor air quality.
It does make me wonder how the forest floor used to look with more frequent fires, and what that meant for air quality, if lightning caused fires were burning a large fraction of the forest floor every year. (20%, 50%?)
All the best,
Peter
Here’s some pics from yesterday at Rocky Mountain National Park. Miles of forest and entire mountains cooked. What one of the knowledgeable locals told us was that in warmer cycles, the wood boring beetles have more time to breed and when more breed, more trees die from the beetles. This creates more dead, dry trees so when a camper does something stupid, or there’s a lightning strike, the results are more catastrophic
View attachment 707789
View attachment 707790
That’s what I heard, too. This year, there’s so many beetles, the trees can’t fight them off. I got up close to many dead lodge pole pines and they had thousands of holes drilled in the,The pine beetle can't survive a week straight of 20 below F. We haven't seen that in a few years. -40F was a common winter occurrence when I was a kid in the 50's. Haven't seen that in 30 years.
Ponderosa pine on my place fight hard when infected. They form pitch tubes sticking out a couple of inches trying to rid the beetle. They don't have a chance as the beetles swarm to a tree and overpower it.
Usually, they target stressed trees that are fighting for life in an overgrown environment. With that, it's survival of the fittest.
That’s what I heard, too. This year, there’s so many beetles, the trees can’t fight them off. I got up close to many dead lodge pole pines and they had thousands of holes drilled in the,
They probably happened with more frequency and less intensity. We've been suppressing forest fires for decades; in regions where there isn't much timber harvesting, that amounts to a lot of built up fuel. It also was never as important back then, people didn't have multi million dollar properties at stake.
That's another difference between the East and West coasts. The primary species on your side of the continent developed to thrive on fire... over here, not so much.Gifford Pinchot, 1st head of the USFS declared in 1911 that all fires must be put out. That was in response to a huge set of fires in 1910 that burned 3 million acres. It took a while for the FS to develop equipment and techniques to do that but by the '30s they were making good on it.
Logging by itself does not fix the fuels problem. If you clear cut and burn all the slash, a few years after the new trees are planted they become super flammable like a brush field because they're close together and low to the ground. Normally with a select cut the most valuable trees are the ones taken, but those are the large trees that survive fire the best. What's ideal from a fire standpoint is to remove the undergrowth and small trees but there's little commercial value in that. We're going to have to use practices specifically aimed at fire reduction.