Crater Lake National Park News
Crater Lake Institute - www.craterlakeinstitute.com
Prescribed burns planned at Crater Lake
Herald and News
Klamath Falls, Oregon
October 05, 2005
By LEE JUILLERAT
Recent snow and rain at Crater Lake National Park means that
several prescribed burns will be done in the coming weeks.
Brad Reed, the park's fire management officer, said the most
visible project will be the burning of slash piles from the
first phase of the Mazama Village hazardous fuels reduction
project. Hundreds of piles of small limbs and branches have
accumulated in and around Mazama Village, near the park's south
entrance.
Reed said the piles stem from efforts to reduce potentially
hazardous fuels in the heavily visited, developed area. Over the
next several weeks, fire crews will light and monitor the slash
piles.
Park
visitors may see smoke along Highway 62 and in the Munson Valley
(park headquarters) area. He said fire managers will monitor
smoke conditions to ensure motorist safety.
A second project is the Cornerstone-Phoenix prescribed burn in
the park's northeast corner. Burns will be done in two units
covering 1,000 and 1,500 acres.
"If drier conditions return," Reed said, "one or both of the
units may be burned under carefully prescribed conditions to
reduce unnatural fuel accumulations and help restore the natural
role of fire in the park's ecosystem."
He said the projects are intended to provide public safety while
helping to "restore the natural role of fire" to the park.
"Our fire management plan calls for numerous similar projects
over the next five years as part of our overall strategy of
managing prescribed fire, wildland fire use and fire
suppression," Reed said.
- By Lee Juillerat