Tiffany Woods, senior coordinator for the National Wildlife Federation’s Southeast Forestry Program, recently detailed her experience participating in a prescribed fire operation on her uncle Chuck William’s land.
Williams, a strong advocate for the forestry community, is a Georgia Forestry Association landowner member from Watkinsville and a member of the Georgia House of Representatives. Read more about Wood’s experience in her blog detailed below or click here to view the blog on nwf.org.
Setting the Woods on Fire
Two weekends ago I received the call I had been waiting for. The necessary weather elements—temperature and relative humidity, among other variables—had combined to create great conditions for a prescribed forest fire. And better yet, I was invited to help!
Hands down, my favorite forest management activity is working alongside landowners to assist with controlled burns in Southeastern pine forests that are adapted to fire. This time, I’d be helping my uncle and aunt, who own forestland in northeast Georgia.
With so many catastrophic forest fires in the news, I often get asked, “Why would you want to burn a forest on purpose?” The answer is simple—and also complex.
In certain forest and other so-called “fire adapted” or even “fire dependent” ecosystems, prescribed fire is one of the most economical and ecologically-friendly tools landowners have to manage their land. Many Southeastern pine forests, such as longleaf pine, are well-adapted to survive and even regenerate after fire. Loblolly forests, such as the one we were going to be burning, can also benefit from prescribed fire.
Rather than applying expensive chemical treatments or mechanical procedures to control shrubs and trees, over the past few decades land managers have learned how to apply a low-heat prescribed fire in a controlled setting that results in a vast array of benefits. Just one control burn can reduce wildfire hazard by decreasing the amount of “fuel” in a forest, improve habitat for wildlife species, reduce competition from undesired plants and shrubs, enhance appearance, and improve access—all at the same time.
Periodic prescribed fire in southern pine forests helps maintain a park-like appearance where the open canopy of the trees allows for sunlight to stream to the forest floor for plants to sprout and grow. These low-intensity fires also improve the quantity and quality of forbs, legumes and other vegetation that are important habitat for wildlife such as white-tailed deer, mourning doves, and wild turkey, allowing them to travel, forage and find shelter in these forests.
One of the first steps of planning for a safe and controlled prescribed fire is to establish fire breaks, or obstacles that are used to contain the fire within the burn area. My uncle and aunt had set the breaks and prepared the equipment (tractor, rakes, and water) before my arrival.
All that was left to do was ignite a spark and carry it along the fire line. Donning my fire-resistant gear and holding a drip-torch in hand, I set off for another adventure in the woods. My job was to walk alongside the edge of a parcel, letting the drip torch do its job of “dripping” fire onto the pine needles so that the natural, low-burning flames would carry with the wind across the land to the next firebreak. It was a fantastic, tiring, and enlightening time (pun intended), and as is always the case with control burns, it also brought with it a learning opportunity.
On this brisk February afternoon, I learned how to put out a fire that I had mistakenly set in a specific wooded area. After a bit of miscommunication on my behalf, I accidentally lit a pine and hardwood section, which wasn’t supposed to be burned because it had a heavy fuel-load from the thick brush. Quickly the fire started growing and moving. Thankfully, right away my uncle drove over with the tractor and water tank to extinguish the larger flames as we raked and flapped out the smaller flames. Tensions and stakes were both high during this 30 minute time-span, but from my uncle and aunt’s proper preparations, the fire was effectively maintained and extinguished.
Later in the afternoon we spotted a young Timber Rattlesnake making its way across a firebreak to escape to a previously burned section of the woods. Keeping a safe distance, we were able to divert the snake into a nearby hole that it could burrow for shelter.
The benefits created from a control burn for wildlife habitat and shelter far outweigh the individual loss that potentially occurs from a fire. Most wildlife species are adapted to survive low-intensity burns and will burrow down in holes, climb to a safe height, or outrun the flames. For instance, my aunt and uncle’s controlled burn was specifically done to improve the habitat for the wild turkeys that populate the area, as this burn will open up the woody understory and help with the growth of native grasses, forbs and legumes.
As the day came to end and the last flames slowly died down, I walked out of the woods knowing that the next time I returned, a myriad of understory plant species would be growing from where my drip torch had last been. But most importantly, I would hear and see the tell-tale signs of wildlife that will most certainly benefit from my time in the woods with a driptorch.
The National Wildlife Federation’s Southeast forestry program supports a wide array of sustainable forestry practices, including prescribed fire in the longleaf and other fire-adapted pine ecosystems.Learn more about NWF’s southeastern forestry program.