Burning a Wisconsin prairie in the winter!
I’ve discussed the problems with fall prairie burns in our
part of the country.
So if fall burns are so difficult, winter burns must be
impossible?
Yesterday (December 18, 2018) we had a very successful winter burn
at Black Earth Rettenmund Prairie. How was that??
The November/December weather had not been good. No sun, mostly
cold and cloudy, little snow, not much rain. We had given up doing any burns.
But then, December 15-18 a dry air mass arrived, with dew point 20-22, clear
sunny weather, strong south wind, and temperatures reaching the low 40’s (F) by
noon. It certainly wasn’t Indian Summer, but we had burned with these sort of
conditions last spring. Fire, of course, makes its own temperature, so if the
fuel has good prairie grass and the dead fuel moisture content is favorable, it should burn.
Fortunately, our burn crew was available. We decided to do
it.
One problem with a winter burn is you need water, and the
pump at our well had been drained for the winter. Since the temperature was slightly above freezing, we primed the pump and filled all the water jugs and backcans. (At the end of the day the pump was drained again and all backcans emptied and the spray wands brought indoors.)
Kathie had already mowed the fire breaks, so the prairie was
ready to burn. The map at the end of this post shows the burn area. Amanda ran the burn.
The weather continued favorable. We met at BE Rettenmund at 11:30 AM for a noon start. We had
eight crew, all experienced, and one trainee.
Because of the south wind, we started at the north end of
the North Unit. One crew moved west and south, the other east and south. Each
person had a radio, so the two crews could keep in touch.
One problem with burning this prairie is that it is a long,
narrow unit with two moderate hills that break up the wind. So a south wind is
often a southwest or southeast wind, often at the same time on different parts
of the burn unit. Fortunately, the prairie is surrounded on most sides by
crops, which at this time of year have been harvested. The bare fields show
well in the photos.
The North Burn unit (on the right) is almost finished burning. The head fire at top will be coalescing with the back fire from the north. Jared is starting to light the Saddle. |
A satisfied crew. Denny, Jared, Amanda, Tiffany, Chris (kneeling, with two drip torches) Susan, Josh, Kathie. (Tom, who drove the truck, behind the camera). |
3 Comments:
It was a good burn, for sure....but not a winter burn. just a few days short of being a solstice burn!
Big deal, i know. I's felt like winter all fall.
Cheerio,
Denny
I had a February burn done on my place. It turned out very well. Chance favors the prepared!
I wish I could get someone to help me burn my sections of prairie, but it's "too small".
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