xj-grin
NAXJA Member #1096
- Location
- Colorado Springs, Colorado
Our BLM FF's visited us at the station last night to brief us on local conditions. We are setting records for how dry the fuels are. It's just a waiting game at this point.
having camped up in the northern part of middle park a few weeks ago, I agree, Kevin. I've never see a complete standing-dead forest before. The creaks and pops were eerie, but one lightning strike and that will go up like a candle.
As for the '88 yellowstone fire, and actually forest fire in general, I disagree that anything was "lost". I was fortunate enough to be in the park before the fire in '88, and then again in both '89 and '90 after the fire -- the changes to the ecosystem are absolutely spectacular, with different species taking over the understory, and wildlife expanding to new areas due to the new openness. You can already see this happening in the beetle kill portions of Colorado, where grasses and shrubs are growing in what used to be lodgepole shadows, and elk and deer are growing fat on the new forage.
Obviously the loss of private property and homes in wildfires is tragic, but to say that we lost something just isn't really accurate -- its certainly different, but not lost. Indeed, many species of pine/spruce/fir NEED fire in order to germinate and reproduce. If our government hadn't insisted on 100% fire suppression for decades, resulting in overly dense forests, none of these fires would be nearly as devastating as they are... we're paying the piper, so to speak...