This season we have been doing prescribed burns in fairly
cold weather. The dew points have been quite low, so that there was no dew on
the grass even when the temperature dropped to the mid 20s (F).
Leading up to each burn day we had several days of clear,
sunny weather with temperatures reaching the upper 40s. But for the two successful prairie burns we did on Friday March 16, 2018 the temperature never got above
32 F! We burned the East Basin (5 acres, with complicated topography) and the Valley Prairie (4 acres adjacent to the PVC wetland).
I had no success finding any information in the fire
literature about burns in cold weather. Perhaps most
people think you can’t burn when it is cold.
One of the most important parameters for a prescribed burn
is dead fuel moisture content. This time of year prairie grass is fully cured,
which means that its moisture content is completely controlled by external
conditions, most importantly rainfall (or lack of it) and relative humidity
(R.H.). Although temperature does have an effect on the rate at which moisture of
the grass is taken up or lost, the most important influence of temperature on dead fuel
moisture is the effect on R.H. When we burned Friday, the R.H. was below 50%.
Although the fire literature has tables for estimating dead
fuel moisture, these are only approximations and don’t take local conditions
into consideration. But there is a simple way of estimating dead fuel moisture
of oak leaves, which are a fairly good surrogate for grass.
This is McCarthy’s test for assessing the moisture content
of hardwood leaves by bending.
Moisture content
|
Behavior during bending
|
20-40%
|
Leaves crack if creased but do not break entirely
|
14-20%
|
Leaves crack if folded more than a right angle
|
14%
|
Leaves crack if bent at a right angle but do not break
freely, especially at the veins
|
10%
|
Leaves break entirely apart if bent at right angles
|
below 10%
|
Leaf crumbles when you pick it up
|
Source: McCarthy, E.F. 1927. Weather and forest inflammability
in the southern Appalachians.
Monthly Weather Review, March 1927.
Just before we started the East Basin burn, I used the oak leaf bend test. It gave a reading of 14%, which is a good dead fuel moisture content for a prairie burn
The photos show the fire behavior in the East Basin Prairie,
a restored prairie. The fuel here, mainly Indian grass and little bluestem, was
in its 8th growing season and obviously well established.
According to NOAA weather radio, the early afternoon
temperature was 32 or 33 F over all of southern Wisconsin.
Successful prairie burn under cold-weather conditions
Doing some interior lighting on a later stage of the burn This prairie has a complicated shape, with level areas surrounding a steep south-facing basin |
Two fire lines meeting on the final stage of the burn |
Final check of the burn. Most of the small smokers are well inside the unit and will be left to burn up |
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