We had another blow up today here in Northern Wyoming and Southern Montana. Two new fires east of me now and the Ashland fire now on it's way to 200,000 acres is causing more evacuations as I write this note. They were also expecting the Dahl fire to explode again today. Looking like I will be getting called in on a support crew soon.
Check this quote out from one of the FS overhead staff regarding the fuels on the Ashland Fire. This is in today's Billings Gazette online. I am sure Colorado is dealing with the same short sighted environmentalist crap.
"The 157,000-acre Ash Creek fire burning northeast of Ashland is heading straight for a region of the Custer National Forest that, for almost a decade, the agency has wanted to log to lessen the intensity of just such a wildland fire.
"Had we been able to move forward with the project, the management action could have helped," said Marna Daley, a public affairs officer for the Gallatin and Custer national forests. "But it's impossible to predict to what degree."
The project was repeatedly appealed by environmental groups, forcing the Forest Service to rewrite the plan three times.
The most recent incarnation of what the Forest Service calls a "vegetation management plan" would have removed "ladder fuels," spreading out the canopy between mature trees, and eliminated dense understory. The Beaver Creek project, approved in the spring of 2011, proposed to commercially log 1,487 acres, and set prescribed fire to 8,054 acres.
But a federal judge ordered the agency to go back and rework its proposal to address stormwater runoff concerns regarding road building and road density. The Ashland Ranger District is conducting a supplemental environmental impact statement to address the judge's ruling.
The fire may make the vegetation management project moot.
"Once the fire is under control we'll have to determine how to proceed," Daley said. "The assessment will have to include a much larger area, too, because the effects are much larger."
The plan was proposed to deal with just such a fire. Thinning trees and understory could have meant the fire would have dropped to the ground, rather than race across the tree crowns.
"The project would not have prevented a fire from occurring," Daley said. "That was not the purpose of the project. But it could have moderated the fire behavior. I say 'could' because with the extreme fire activity and behavior we're seeing, it's unknown."
Definitely thank a wildland firefighter or anyone out there you see that has been on the lines so far. This is just going to get uglier.