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Prescribed burns planned this week around Lake Tahoe

A map of prescribed burns that are scheduled over the next few weeks.
Provided

LAKE TAHOE — Smoke from prescribed burns will likely be visible over the next several weeks as agencies try to remove slash piles and excess vegetation that can feed wildfires.

Tahoe Fire and Fuels Team members, California State Parks and Tahoe Douglas Fire Protection District, are planning to conduct understory burns, weather permitting, at Sugar Pine Point State Park, Glenbrook and Zephyr Cove.

Due to high wind Monday, the burn at Sugar Pine Point was canceled. The next scheduled burn is on Monday, May 18.



Prescribed fire managers use different methods to reintroduce fire back into forests that include pile burning and understory burning.

Pile burning is intended to remove excess fuels (branches, limbs and stumps) that can feed unwanted wildfires and involves burning slash piles that are constructed by hand and mechanical equipment.



Understory burning is low intensity prescribed fire that takes place on the ground (the understory) rather than pile burning.

Understory burning uses a controlled application of fire to remove excess vegetation under specific environmental conditions that allow fire to be confined to a predetermined area. It produces fire behavior and fire characteristics required to attain planned fire and resource management objectives.

According to a press release, each prescribed fire operation follows a specialized burn plan, which considers temperature, humidity, wind, moisture of the vegetation and conditions for the dispersal of smoke. All of this information is used to decide when and where to burn.

Prescribed fire operations are conducted whenever weather conditions and staffing allow to reduce excess vegetation that can feed fires. Planned fires now reduce the threat of unplanned blazes later, which helps provide increased community protection.

Fire is a natural process in the Sierra Nevada and helps keep our forests healthy by minimizing the spread of insects and disease, recycling nutrients back into the soil and promoting improved habitat for diverse vegetation and wildlife.

Smoke from prescribed fire operations is normal and may continue for several days after an ignition depending on the project size and environmental conditions. Prescribed fire smoke is generally less intense and of much shorter duration than smoke produced by unwanted wildland fires.

Agencies coordinate closely with local county and state air pollution control districts and monitor weather conditions carefully prior to prescribed fire ignitions. They wait for favorable conditions that will carry smoke up and disperse it away from smoke sensitive areas. Crews also conduct test burns before igniting a larger area, to verify how effectively materials are consumed and how smoke will travel.

Before prescribed fire operations are conducted, agencies post road signs around areas affected by prescribed fire, send email notifications and update the local fire information line maintained by the Lake Tahoe Basin Management Unit at 530-543-2816.

The TFFT gives as much advance notice as possible before burning, but some operations may be conducted on short notice due to the small window of opportunity.

View the map with the project details at https://www.tahoelivingwithfire.com/get-informed/ and sign-up for prescribed fire notifications by sending an email to pa_ltbmu@fs.fed.us.

To learn more about the benefits prescribed fire, visit http://www.tahoelivingwithfire.com/get-informed/understanding-fire/.


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