I’ve posted on this before but it doesn’t hurt to repeat it.
Restoration work, especially of oak savannas, results in
lots of downed timber. Although good logs can be turned into lumber, and less
good logs into fire wood, there is always lots more woody biomass that ends up
on piles.
Some of these piles might be saved as critter habitat, but because
they complicate controlled burns, most of them have to be eliminated by
burning.
In the early days of our restoration work at Pleasant Valley
Conservancy, we had large numbers of brush piles. On the South Slope alone, in
the years 1999-2000, we had 230 large piles, all of which we burned that
winter. (See photo below)
Kathie and Pat Schrader lighting brush piles on the South Slope of Pleasant Valley Conservancy; Jan 2000 |
In April 2000 Dane County did high resolution air
photography of the whole county, and on the photo of our property every one of
those burned spots can be seen and counted.
There is a skill in building a good burn pile. The secret is
to make the pile compact, which means cutting many of the smaller branches so
that the wood can lie flat. The more compact the pile, the better it burns. A
chain saw or lopper is essential when building a burn pile.
Piles should only be burned when there is snow on the
ground. This ensures that the fire stays put and the pile can be burned safely.
(In our area, we need a DNR permit for any burning we do after January 1, but
we don’t need a permit if there is snow on the ground.)
The best fuel to get a brush pile started is drip torch fuel
(2 or 3 parts diesel to 1 part gasoline.
If there is a lot of snow on top of the pile, it will
probably burn better if the snow is blown away with a leaf blower.
The best routine is to burn a lot of brush piles the same
day. Get started early, as it will take all day to finish the job on each pile.
Start all the piles in sequence and make sure the fire is going well at each
pile before moving on to the next. Return to those lighted
earliest after about an hour, and check on the fire. After lunch, return again,
starting again at the pile lighted first.
The watchword for the afternoon is “consolidate”. A good
garden rake or shovel is best, and heavy leather gloves. There will be lots of
unburned wood at the edge of each pile. Use the tool to lift them and throw
them into the center of the burning pile. For smaller pieces, pick them up by hand and toss them into the center of the pile.
Go around the whole periphery of the pile, and get everything back on to the pile.
Go around the whole periphery of the pile, and get everything back on to the pile.
Continue around the circuit of piles, consolidating each one
before moving to the next.
At the end of the day the goal should be that all the wood is burned
up, with only ashes left.
I’m often asked if burn piles don’t sterilize the soil
underneath. The answer is yes, although soil is a poor conductor of heat, so it
should only be a top thin layer that is sterilized. But the bare area should be
planted with a good seed mix similar to that of the surrounding habitat. Blow
away all the ashes with a leaf blower, leaving only bare soil. The planting can
be done any time, although best in the winter so that the seeds have a chance
to get stratified.
Our experience is that even the end of the first growing
season, you will hardly know where the burn pile was, and by the
following year everything will be back to normal.
Be sure to wear a fire-proof jacket, because a burning pile
creates lots of sparks. You don’t need Nomex, but any old cloth jacket that won’t
burn.
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