Prescribed fire operations around Lake Tahoe this week
Submitted by paula on Mon, 12/04/2023 - 3:22pm
UPDATE One new location has been added to this week's planned prescribed burns:
The USDA Forest Service will be burning off Fountain Place Road off Pioneer Trail near South Lake Tahoe. 34 acres of hand piles will be burned 12/06-12/2023.
* * *
The Tahoe Fire & Fuels Team (TFFT) is scheduled to continue widespread prescribed fire operations this week at Lake Tahoe, conditions and weather permitting. Smoke from these operations may be present throughout the Lake Tahoe Basin and surrounding areas.
On the map above, a red "X" means the project is on hold or completed, a green "X" is a city project (see here), and the ones being ignited this week are numbered:
1. NDSL Washoe County Urban Lots-North Lake Tahoe Fire Protection District,
Crystal Bay. Burn Type: Hand Piles. Total Acreage: 12. Planned Ignition: 12/04-10/2023.
2. USFS Washoe Piles (Rose 21-HT)-North Lake Tahoe Fire Protection District,
Second Creek Drainage, Incline Village, Burn Type: Hand Piles. Total Acreage: 63. Planned Ignition: 12/04-10/2023.
3. Bon Pland-North Lake Tahoe Fire Protection District. Along SR28 near Memorial Point, Northeast Shore of Lake Tahoe. Burn Type: Hand Piles.
Total Acreage: 20. Planned Ignition: 12/04-10/2023.
4. South Mill Creek-North Lake Tahoe Fire Protection District. Mill Creek Drainage, behind old Ponderosa Ranch. Burn Type: Hand Piles. Total Acreage: 20. Planned Ignition: 12/04-10/2023.
5. Spooner Pile Burn-Nevada Division of Forestry. Nevada State Park at Spooner Lake and Backcountry, North Canyon. Burn Type: Hand Piles. Total Acreage: 20. Planned Ignition: 10 a.m. 12/05-08/2023.
6. Montreal-USDA Forest Service Lake Tahoe Basin Management Unit. East of Glenbrook and South of Spooner Guard Station. Burn Type: Hand Piles. Total Acreage: 10. Planned Ignition: 12/04-09/2023.
7. Summit-Tahoe Douglas Fire Protection District. Logan Creek and Glenbrook. Burn Type: Hand Piles. Total Acreage: 15. Planned Ignition: 12/04/2023.
8. Zephyr Cove Piles-Tahoe Douglas Fire Protection District. Zephyr Cove. Burn Type: Hand Piles. Total Acreage: 15. Planned Ignition: 12/05/2023.
9. Kingsbury Urban Lots-Tahoe Douglas Fire Protection District. Stateline.
Burn Type: Hand Piles. Total Acreage: 10. Planned Ignition: 12/05/2023.
View smoke management tips and current air quality index at AirNow and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency/USDA Forest Service Fire and Smoke Map. TView the prescribed fire map with project details and locations above and at Tahoe Living With Fire.
For areas on hold or complete and in patrol status, which means firefighters are patrolling and mopping up to reduce smoke impacts to communities.
Prescribed fires are a vital forest management tool used by land managers to help protect communities by removing fuels that can feed unwanted wildland fires. Burning excess vegetation also benefits forest health by making room for new growth which provides forage for wildlife, recycles nutrients back into the soil and helps reduce the spread of insects and disease.
Prescribed fire managers use different methods to remove excess vegetation (fuels) and reintroduce low-intensity fire into forests through pile, broadcast, and understory burning. Pile burning involves burning slash piles that are constructed by hand or mechanical equipment. Broadcast and understory burning use low-intensity fire to remove fuels under specific environmental conditions with fire confined to a predetermined area.
Historically, low-intensity wildfires ignited by lightning or native peoples routinely burned through fire-adapted ecosystems of the Sierra Nevada. These low-intensity fires burned at low temperatures and moved slowly across the ground removing forest debris such as pinecones, needles, limbs, dead and downed trees, and ladder fuels. Watch the Forest Service video for an in-depth explanation of low-intensity fire. Prescribed fires are meant to mimic these naturally occurring low-intensity fires that are essential to fire-adapted ecosystems.
Prescribed fires may take place any time of year when conditions are favorable. Fall and winter typically bring cooler temperatures and precipitation, which are ideal for conducting prescribed fire operations. Each operation follows a specialized burn plan, which considers smoke dispersal conditions, temperature, humidity, wind, and vegetation moisture. All this information is used to decide when and where to burn.
The TFFT strongly supports the use of prescribed fire under appropriate conditions and works closely with air quality districts to avert smoke impacts on the public. Smoke from prescribed fires is normal and may continue for several days after an ignition depending on the project size, conditions, and weather. Prescribed fire smoke is generally less intense and of much shorter duration than smoke produced by unwanted wildfires. Smoke from prescribed burns, wildfire or wood-burning stoves may hang low to the ground at night and in the early morning due to a phenomenon known as a temperature inversion. A temperature inversion is when warm air “caps” cooler air, causing smoke to become trapped in valley bottoms at night and in the early morning.
Prior to prescribed fire ignitions, agencies coordinate closely with local and state air quality agencies to monitor weather for favorable conditions that can disperse smoke, conduct test burns before igniting larger areas to verify how well vegetation is consumed and how smoke rises and disperses before proceeding, post signs on roadways in areas affected by prescribed fire operations, email notifications to the prescribed fire notification list, and update the local fire information line 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 for implementing these projects.
Learn more about living in fire-adapted ecosystems at Tahoe Living With Fire and get prepared, get informed, and get involved!