Just a heads-up on the open house that the USFS is
having at Co Spr Utilites tomorrow evening. The proposed area of thinning
covers a lot of the
PUBLIC
OPEN HOUSE
The U.S. Forest Service will hold an open house 5:30 to 7:30 p.m . April 23 on
a proposal to thin or burn 25,000 acres of forest on
Below is the Gazette article on this and here’s a link to the map
of proposed thinning area (area to be thinned in green (it’s huge) - red
is area of highest fire risk): http://video.onset.freedom.com/colgazette/khx307-0411forestmap.pdf
There is some additional info at http://www.fs.fed.us/r2/psicc/projects/
- see “Pikes Peak District - Catamount Project” under the “Fuels
Treatment Projects” heading on the right of the page.
Jim Yount
jyount@...
719-540-1505
************************************************************
Fire danger brings call for action on
April
10, 2009 - 5:16 PM
THE
GAZETTE
The U.S. Forest
Service wants to thin or burn 25,000 acres of overgrown forest on
It would be the
largest tree removal project on the peak since 1890s loggers left wide swaths
of the mountain bare to meet the demands of
Officials say thinning
and burning is needed because a major fire on the peak would pose a threat to
the lives and property of the many people who live adjacent to the peak's
forests, Colorado Springs' water system, a tourism industry that depends on
500,000 visitors to the mountain each year and the nearby outdoor recreation
that is the reason many people live here.
The Forest Service
will hold an open house April 23, as part of an environmental assessment on the
thinning project. Colorado Springs Utilities, which operates a network of
reservoirs and pipelines and owns 15,000 acres on the peak, is also taking
part.
It is unclear when the
work would occur. The environmental review would last into 2010. A
The project grew from
a study last year, the 2008 Catamount Landscape Assessment Report, that found
large parts of the peak have become overgrown because humans have suppressed
fires that would otherwise clear foliage and keep stands of trees from becoming
too dense.
"The result has
been a transformation of forest stands moving from open park-like areas into
more dense stands," the report said. Among the ponderosa pine, Douglas fir
and Gambel oak, which make up most of the peak's forests between 6,000 and
10,000 feet of elevation, large fires historically occurred every 50 to 60
years, and smaller ones more frequently.
But after the area was
logged in the late 19th century, fires have been suppressed.
The study says 160
fires occurred from 1974 to 2006 in the project area. Most, 120, were less than
one-quarter acre, 37 were between one-quarter and 10 acres, and only three
burned more than 10 acres. The total area burned by the fires was 145 acres.
The study said 46
percent of this area, known as the montane zone, has a moderate fire risk, and
50 percent has a high risk. Most of the high-risk areas are along Ute Pass, on
both sides of U.S. Highway 24, the lower slopes of Pikes Peak west of Colorado
Springs and along Colorado Highway 67 south of Divide.
The report said 16,600
acres of the most overgrown areas could be thinned by hand and machine, but on
9,000 acres, the slope is too steep, and controlled burns could be used.
While the Forest
Service has increased tree-thinning and controlled burns in
The Colorado State
Forest Service has thinned 600 acres of Utilities land around reservoirs.
PUBLIC
OPEN HOUSE
The U.S. Forest Service will hold an open house 5:30 to 7:30 p.m . April 23 on
a proposal to thin or burn 25,000 acres of forest on