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    Controlled burns improve training areas, prevent wildfires, protect endangered species

    Controlled burns improve training areas, habitats, prevent wildfires

    Photo By Staff Sgt. Todd Pouliot | Evan Strickland, an equipment operator with Fort Stewart’s Forestry Branch, ignites...... read more read more

    FORT STEWART, GA, UNITED STATES

    02.04.2020

    Story by Staff Sgt. Todd Pouliot 

    50th Public Affairs Detachment

    Seven months out of the year, large tracts of Fort Stewart training areas are intentionally set ablaze. The Fort Stewart/Hunter Army Airfield Forestry Branch works around the year to manage the largest forestry program in the Army – 139,000 acres of pine forest, 74,000 acres of forested wetlands, 58,300 acres of forest openings, and 9,600 acres of hardwood management areas. Management of these lands result in improved training areas for FS/HAAF Soldiers, improved wildlife habits, and a reduction of wildfire hazards.

    From December 1 to March 30, Forestry Branch’s burn season, the focus is on clearing out combustible plants from the training areas with prescribed burns, also known as controlled burns.

    “We’re putting fire on the ground under our terms,” said Bryan Whitmore, fire management supervisor at FS/HAAF Forestry Branch. “For a wildfire, we don’t have control over the weather conditions. However, with prescribed burns, we dictate the behavior of the fire.”

    A great deal of planning and coordination goes into conducting controlled burns to prevent smoke from blowing into populated areas, such as the Fort Stewart cantonment area, main roads, and nearby towns and cities.

    Whitmore explained how fire planners start planning burns up to months in advance, coordinating with range control and wildlife branch to determine training usage and areas that must be avoided due to endangered habitats, significantly, that of the Red Cockaded Woodpecker. Most importantly, fire planners constantly monitor weather forecasts from the national weather service.

    “Weather dictates when we’re going to burn, where we’re going to burn, and how we’re going to burn,” Whitmore said.

    Ideal weather for burns, according to Whitmore, calls for clear skies and winds that will not push smoke into the cantonment area, major highways, or any training missions. Burns are typically conducted in the early afternoon when morning moisture has evaporated.

    Most of the prescribed burns conducted by Fort Stewart Forestry Branch are executed using aerial ignition in which small ignitors are dropped from a contracted helicopter. This is due to the training areas’ vast landscapes which require burning, and rough terrain, which includes large bogs and swamps.

    Baseline fires are ignited upwind, either by hand using a drip torch, or a terra torch operated from the back of a truck. The wind will cause the baseline fires to move toward the fires ignited from the air. When the fires come together, they burn out as fuel eventually is completely consumed. Equipment operators are posted nearby to extinguish any residual fires.

    The morning before an afternoon burn, burn bosses and the helicopter crew conduct a pre-burn briefing to plan what will happen during the day, and determine the best route for the helicopter to fly based upon expected smoke dispersion.

    "We’re responsible for all the resources on the ground,” said Nick Seanor, a burn boss with FS/HAAF Forestry Branch. “We’re also responsible for directing the helicopter from a ground perspective and making decisions based on conditions.”

    Not all plant growth in the training areas is desirable. In fact, other than fire-resistant Longleaf Pine, most plant growth in the training areas is potential fuel if a wildfire should ignite and spread. Large swaths of land are designated for prescribed burns to reduce the amount of fuel.

    “An open, pine-dominated landscape is ideal for maneuver training, it promotes nesting of the Red Cockaded Woodpecker, and it significantly reduces the intensity of a wildfire if one should ignite,” said Whitmore.

    For more information about FS/HAAF Environmental Division, visit https://home.army.mil/stewart/index.php/about/Garrison/DPW/environmental

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    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 02.04.2020
    Date Posted: 02.13.2020 15:07
    Story ID: 363014
    Location: FORT STEWART, GA, US

    Web Views: 101
    Downloads: 0

    PUBLIC DOMAIN