The Weather Bureau made no mention of it, but March 2-4 2018
provided unusually good weather for controlled burns, especially for oak
savannas. This is quite a bit earlier than we usually do savanna burns, but one
element of burn planning is to burn whenever the weather is right.
Carrying out controlled burns of natural areas require lots
of attention to detail.
We had already done a major burn of our South Slope prairie
and bur oak savanna remnants on February 27, with the same kind of weather
conditions. After a few days of uncertain weather, the good weather returned. A
cold air mass moved in with low dew point (21 F) and moderately warm temperatures
(45-50 F). Especially important was that the sky was clear and the sun was
strong. (In early March the angle of the sun is already high enough to bring on
significant warming of the fuel; grass and oak leaves.)
As long as you have low R.H. and sun, you don’t really need
warm weather, provided it is above freezing. An additional important weather element was
a good wind (8-10 mph) from the south. (Because oak savannas often have
downed woody debris, a good wind is an important element for a savanna burn,
since it helps to keep the fire moving along.)
It took a day to get everything ready, so the burn was
scheduled for March 4, a Sunday, giving us the opportunity of getting more than
usual volunteers. These together with the Integrated Restorations crew gave us
16 people, all experienced burners. (The IR folks understand about burn
scheduling and are willing to work on Sunday!)
The crew assembling at the anchor point. The vehicles were parked on a black area from a previous burn. Each person had a two-way radio, essential on such a burn. |
We burned all the area shown in light tan on the map, 36
acres. Because of logistics, those units north of the motor vehicle road (Unit
19B,C,D, and E) were burned separately after lunch along with several units from a future planned burn (Toby’s Prairie, Annex, Triangle; see map); 6 acres.
We call the units we burned the Basin Savanna, since they
essentially wrap around the Pocket Prairie, which acts like a “basin”. The oaks
in the upper part of the basin are burs and those lower down predominantly
white, with some Hill’s oak and black oak intermixed.
The location of the start
of the burn, which was also our anchor point, was the junction on the map where
19E, 12B, and Toby’s Prairie come together. One crew moved west from there
along the gravel road, backburning down through 11B and 11A until they reached
Unit 18. The other crew moved east, backburning through 12A and 20 until they reached the Pocket Prairie.
Timing was critical and it
was essential that the two crews coordinate. We did not want the 2nd
crew to get too far ahead because once the 12A fire line reached the Pocket
Prairie it would touch off a head fire in the prairie that could sweep up into
18 and 11D. Thus, the 1st crew had to get the 11A backburn finished
first. Fortunately, every crew member had a two-way radio, so that coordination
was good. Amanda, the burn boss, monitored the two crews carefully.
The Basin Savanna burned
very well, benefiting from the RH of 35-40% and a strong drying wind gusting from
the south or east.
We had twelve drip torches, and used every one!
One of the important
requirements of the savanna burn was to protect the lower branches on the large
trees, especially those attractive “savanna oaks”. The way to do this was to
avoid head fires in the savanna.
Another goal was to
protect as much as possible the living birches, since they are greatly used as
wildlife habitat (woodpeckers, bluebirds). The litter at the bases of the
birches had been removed with a leaf blower.
Another goal was to
protect snags (great wildlife habitat) by clearing the litter around them.
Another reason for
backburning is that it keeps the flame height low.
However, because of the gusty
wind, random change from backfire to headfire sometimes occurred. Although the
wind helped to carry the fire in the savanna, it had potential danger
for special trees, birches, snags.
Tree-centered spot firing One procedure for protecting special trees, birches, and
snags, was tree-centered spot firing. The drip torch operators had been
instructed in how to use this technique. See my blog post for details.
The savanna units back-burned
well but gusts occasionally turned the fire into flank or head fire in some
areas. Fortunately, these were relatively infrequent.
The fire line moving down
through the Basin Savanna eventually reached the Pocket Prairie, jumped the
firebreak, and started the Pocket Prairie on fire. The Pocket Prairie mostly
burned that way but was also lit from Pleasant Valley Road. Fire also started in the
SW corner of the Pocket Prairie area by a spot fire from Unit 18.
One of the goals was to
get the fire into Unit 11A and Unit 18
before the Pocket Prairie caught on fire, because when the Pocket Prairie
burned there was a possibility of it igniting Unit 18 from the bottom and hence
turning Unit 18 burn into a head fire.
Note that with the lush
fuel of the Pocket Prairie and the low RH, the Pocket Prairie burns very
rapidly. It takes no more than 10 minutes for this whole 4.5 acre prairie to
burn. However, this year there was an area of the Pocket Prairie which burned
but the tall dead stems, mostly forbs, did not burn up. This area is in the
outflow of storm water events from the ravine, in a wide line between the
ravine and the outflow into the culvert under Pleasant Valley Road at the south
end of the Pocket Prairie. This is an area that we had recognized as wet-mesic
and had planted with species suitable for that sort of soil. The unburned area shows
in one of the photos.
Recap on the weather: Dry air mass came in Friday and
held for weekend. Sunny. Dewpoint 21. Temp mid 30’s at night to low 50’s by noon. South wind around 10 mph.
The sun was an important factor There were no clouds
during night or day as well as for the two days leading up to the burn. Because
of the low dewpoint, no dew on the grass or leaves. The wind was also important
in helping the fire “carry” through the savanna. The temperature is not as
critical as long as above 45.
Nice comment from volunteer Ron Endres: Will and I were talking about how every single burn is
different. Both the Tuesday and Sunday burns had fire behaviors we had never
seen before. I think one reason we like being on these crews is that there is
an element of "observe and then react" and often problem solving
on the spot. There are very few "boring" fires. We also like burning
with you [Amanda] and Craig and Chris. Even though you are the Burn Boss and Line
Bosses, you draw on our experience. We always feel like we are needed. We work
on a number of different crews and we don't always feel this way. And when the
weather is like it was...it's a wonderful day.
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