Doing What (Be)Comes Natural: Cut, Pile, Burn
Spotfire! Blog Tom Ribe Spotfire! Blog Tom Ribe

Doing What (Be)Comes Natural: Cut, Pile, Burn

On some snowy February days, I drove from my cabin, crossed the Rio Grande Valley north of Santa Fe, and joined other firefighters at sunrise in an icy, snowy place in the Jemez Mountains. I’m used to working on fires in the spring, summer or fall, but here we were with layers of warm gear under our fireproof clothing, blowing into our hands and standing in the sun when it finally came up. Then we set out to burn piles of slash on a snowy slope, deep in the Valles Caldera National Preserve.

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USFS Launches Northwest Forest Plan Amendment
Spotfire! Blog Timothy Ingalsbee Spotfire! Blog Timothy Ingalsbee

USFS Launches Northwest Forest Plan Amendment

The U.S. Forest Service convened the first meeting of a Federal Advisory Committee (FAC) in early September to work on an amendment of the Northwest Forest Plan (NWFP). Covering 17 national forests in 3 states, this is one of the most ambitious planning projects the agency has initiated in years. The agency wants to modernize the 30 year old NWFP by developing new strategies for dealing with climate change and wildfires, and engaging Tribal communities and Indigenous perspectives that were largely excluded from the original plan.

FUSEE's program director for the FireGeneration Collaborative, Ryan Reed, serves on the 21-person FAC as the sole designated "public" representative. Ryan is an Indigenous fire practitioner and wildland firefighter, and is the youngest member ever to serve on a FAC.

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Oregon Landowner Brings Good Fire Back to the Forest
Spotfire! Blog Guest User Spotfire! Blog Guest User

Oregon Landowner Brings Good Fire Back to the Forest

Rich Fairbanks knows what a healthy forest looks like, so when he and his wife bought forested land in the Little Applegate Valley in Southern Oregon in 2003, he started making plans to bring fire back to the land.

“These forests historically saw fire, on average, about every six to ten years” said Fairbanks. Rich holds a M.S. in Fire Science, is a founding FUSEE Board Member, and has semi-retired after a 32 year career with the Forest Service.

“Since 1911, we have been suppressing fires to the maximum extent possible” Fairbanks adds. This has decreased biodiversity, allowed more fuel to build up, and led to higher intensity fires.

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Elers Koch: Early Architect of USFS Firefighting Mission; Early Prophet of Mission Failure
Spotfire! Blog Tom Ribe Spotfire! Blog Tom Ribe

Elers Koch: Early Architect of USFS Firefighting Mission; Early Prophet of Mission Failure

In 2023 when megafires erupt across North America, and our national forests seem trapped in an escalating yet faltering war on wildfire, it might be good to look back on history and see how we got here. How did firefighting on public lands get started? What was US Forest Service firefighting like back in 1905 or 1920? How are those roots relevant today?

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Big Iron & Big Profit
Spotfire! Blog Mike Beasley Spotfire! Blog Mike Beasley

Big Iron & Big Profit

As is in vogue today, business experts are allowed to pose as experts in any and all things. I caught this review of the new book, Running Out of Time: Wildfires and Our Imperiled Forests in Wildfire Today.

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Jetstream
Spotfire! Blog Tom Ribe Spotfire! Blog Tom Ribe

Jetstream

“While most of the United States is coming out of a wet winter, large fires are ravaging Alberta and British Columbia just north of Montana. Ninety large fires have burned a million acres in 2023, burning 150 times more area than fires in the last five years combined. While May is typical fire season in western Canada, fires are going to new extremes this year, burning

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Indigenous Cultural Burning Crew Returns Good Fire to Oregons Willamette Valley
Spotfire! Blog Mike Beasley Spotfire! Blog Mike Beasley

Indigenous Cultural Burning Crew Returns Good Fire to Oregons Willamette Valley

“As a thirty-plus year veteran of wildland firefighting and retired Fire Management Officer for one of California's eighteen National Forests, I have had the privilege of working with many incredible fire crews over the years. But I must say, the crew of young wildland firefighters I had the opportunity to work with this past fall was truly exceptional.

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Fire as the Essential Tool: Remembering to Celebrate Success
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Fire as the Essential Tool: Remembering to Celebrate Success

Looking at the Washburn Fire, there have been dozens of iterations of prescribed burning, thinning, and pile burning around the Mariposa Grove of Giant Sequoias and the nearby community of Wawona.  In addition, the park has since the 1970’s had a program of allowing some lightning caused fires to burn.  Both the human community of homes and infrastructure that comprise Wawona and the natural community of giant sequoias have benefitted from a single program of work – return fire to the extent possible to fire-dependent and fire-adapted landscapes. 

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We Owe the Forests Good Fire
Spotfire! Blog Tom Ribe Spotfire! Blog Tom Ribe

We Owe the Forests Good Fire

People owe the forests and wildlife restoration. We owe the natural world the best of our knowledge to restore the land to a resilient state that will support the maximum populations of diverse plants and animals and give generations of people beautiful places to find solitude, beauty, knowledge, adventure, recreation and spiritual sustenance.

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Forest Wisdom Found At The Golf Course?
Spotfire! Blog Tom Ribe Spotfire! Blog Tom Ribe

Forest Wisdom Found At The Golf Course?

It was a little rich having Donald Trump and Mike Pence coming in from New York and Indiana to tell California’s governor and state scientists that they need to “manage forests” to confront unprecedented wildfire. For those of us deeply involved in fire and land management on federal lands in the West, their know-it-all scolding was laughable, condescending, ignorant and mildly insulting.

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In Oregon’s 2020 fires, highly managed forests burned the most

In Oregon’s 2020 fires, highly managed forests burned the most

This record-breaking fire season has re-ignited discussions about causes of severe fires. One long-standing narrative is that fire suppression has resulted in ‘overgrown’ forests that fuel larger and more intense fires than occur under more intense management (the “fuels narrative”). This narrative, promoted by timber interests and the president, among others, is irrelevant within the context of Oregon's major western Cascades fires.

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