KS Wild Side: ‘Tis the Season for Prescribed Fire

A drip torch is used to intentionally set fires during prescribed burns. Rogue Valley Prescribed Burn Association photo
January 9, 2023

Prescribed fire can help prevent destructive wildfire

By Alexi Lovechio

Now that the winter rains and cooler weather have set in, it is safe to say that the wildfire season has officially come to an end in the Klamath-Siskiyou.

The Ashland foothills are now covered with a light dusting of snow and frost. It’s the time of year when you may notice small columns of smoke in the Ashland watershed on a cold wet morning, or maybe you’re receiving non-emergency prescribed burn notifications on your phone. You may ask yourself, “What is prescribed burning? What’s with the smoke in the watershed?”

Prescribed fires are also known as controlled burns. This is the practice of intentionally setting fire by an expert team under identified weather conditions to restore fire-dependent ecosystems. A goal of using prescribed fire is to remove fine fuels in a forest such as dead grass, fallen tree branches, and thick undergrowth. 

By removing the fine fuels, a prescribed fire can help prevent a destructive wildfire because there is less material to burn and carry flames into the tree’s crown. Fire also rejuvenates a forest. It returns nutrients to the soil and creates habitat for wildlife. After a fire, the additional sunlight and open space in a forest can help young trees and other plants start to grow.

Prescribed burns help maintain the understory of forests by removing accumulated vegetation. Alexi Lovechio photo

Native tribes have used cultural fire for millenia, and while cultural burns and prescribed fire can have similar results, they are not the same thing. Cultural fire is sacred to many tribes across the planet and is used to cultivate specific species and conditions. For more information about tribal fire in the Klamath Mountains, check out the Karuk Tribe website

Fire suppression efforts have grown over the last century, making prescribed fire an important ecological tool. Historically, smaller fires occurred in forests throughout the Klamath-Siskiyou at regular intervals. When these fires are suppressed — and when cultural fires were banned — flammable materials accumulate, and forests become more crowded with small trees and underbrush. Prescribed fire seeks to accomplish the benefits that regular fires historically provided while preventing the fires from burning out of control and threatening our communities. 

The Ashland community is contiguous with the foothills surrounding the valley. Many people live in the wildland-urban interface, a zone of transition from forests to urban development. Prescribed fire is one way to prepare the forests around our community for the upcoming wildfire season. The more controlled burns taking place now during the cool wet months, the more prepared our community and forests will be during the hot and dry wildfire season. 

Living in a fire-prone area can be scary. We have witnessed destructive wildfires that have left our communities changed forever. The good news is there are actions we can take to prepare our communities for it. Wildfire is natural and inevitable; we can’t avoid it, but we can learn to thrive with fire. We can learn from Indigenous communities who have been working with fire from time immemorial. We can use prescribed fire as a way to manage and prepare our forests and keep dangerous flames away from our homes and communities. 

Check out KS Wild’s new podcast, One Foot in the Black, to learn more about fire in the Klamath-Siskiyou.

To learn more and stay informed about the prescribed fires happening in the Ashland watershed, check out the  Ashland Forest Resiliency Project (AFR.) AFR is a team of forest and fire professionals designed to reduce the risk of severe wildfire in the watershed, and to protect water quality, older forests, wildlife, people, property, and quality of life.

To continue learning about fire in the Klamath-Siskiyou, check out KS Wild’s newly released podcast, One Foot in the Black, which explores the root causes and solutions to living with wildfire in the era of climate change. The podcast tells the story of fire in the West — how the landscape has been shaped by fire, how climate change is remaking the rules, and how our future of living with fire is tied to the past. 

KS Wild Side appears every month and features a staff member from KS Wild, a regional conservation organization based in Ashland. Alexi Lovechio is the Forest and Climate Coordinator for KS Wild and works to connect communities with educational and practical wildfire resources to help build a fire-smart community in the Klamath-Siskiyou. For more information go to www.kswild.org

Picture of Ryan

Ryan

Related Posts...

Garden of the Month: Mastering outer spaces

Elizabeth Essex: Gardens catch our attention for various reasons. It might be a striking new plant we haven’t seen before, or the scent of a blossom wafting on the breeze, or the image of a butterfly waving its wings at us! This month, the pergola at 903 Stoneridge Ave. is compelling for its ability to create a garden room much enjoyed by the owners, Christina and David Boenitz.

Read More »

Our Sponsors

Latest posts

Test

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Nunc lobortis enim non odio vulputate, sit amet dapibus ligula dictum. Proin consectetur fringilla dapibus. Pellentesque et dolor iaculis, ullamcorper turpis faucibus,

Read More >

Ask Strider: Advice for big brothers

Ask Strider: A worried older brother asks our advice columnist’s advice. And a dog’s guardian wants to know if there is any hope getting their hat-hating dog to calm down. As always, Strider tries to give words that help!

Read More >

Our Sponsors

Ashland Climate Collaborative Sreets for Everyone Ashland Oregon
Ashland.news Classifieds Ashland Talent Phoenix Medford Oregon
Ashland.news House Ad

Explore More...

This week's theme: bicycle shops, services and routes. Solve it in your browser or download and print. Next Friday's Crossword: OSF's Secret Season #03
This week's theme: four hidden tribes who had to leave our area, in recognition of Indigenous Peoples' Day. Solve it in your browser or download and print. Next Friday's crossword: Enjoy the Ride #03
This week's theme shakes things up for International Shakeout Day, Oct. 16th. Solve it in your browser or download and print. Next Friday's crossword: First Settlers #02
After a successful production of  “The Vagina Monologues” and raising more than $2,000 for Planned Parenthood of Southwestern Oregon, Ashland actor and director Lia Dugal intends for “The Climate Monologues” to premiere in Oregon in late 2025 or early 2026 at the Bellview Grange in Ashland.

Don't Miss Our Top Stories

Get our newsletter delivered to your inbox three times a week.
It’s FREE and you can cancel anytime.

ashland.news logo

Subscribe to the newsletter and get local news sent directly to your inbox.

(It’s free)