
The Washburn Fire is burning through areas of Yosemite National Park, just south of Yosemite Valley. As of Tuesday evening, the fire had consumed roughly 3,500 acres. The Mariposa Grove of giant sequoias, trees more than 3,000 years old, has areas within the footprint of the fire, causing many ecologists and lovers of those massive, ancient trees to worry. But efforts over the years to reduce fuel at the base of the trees seems to have worked, with Yosemite forest ecologist Garret Dickman telling a local news outlet the trees should be spared the worst of the damage.
“The grove itself right now seems to be in pretty good shape,” said Dickman, who on Sunday surveyed the western part of the grove, which was also the eastern flank of the Washburn Fire. “I walked through all the parts that burned and did not see any mortality. Some of the trees had some burn on them, but the level of burn was well within their ability to to handle it.”
Some groves of giant sequoias much further south near Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Parks were wrapped with foil last year during fires in a desperate bid to prevent them burning. That hasn’t been necessary however with the Washburn Fire.
“The really obvious takeaway is we’ve been preparing for this fire for 50 years. And that preparation is saving these trees,” he said. “We haven’t had to wrap trees or really put firefighters at tremendous risk. They’ve been able to engage safely because those fuel reduction treatments have proven to be so effective.”
Fire authorities say the blaze was caused by people and they’re investigating with significant resources brought to bear. There was no lightning the day the fire began, so there’s little reason to expect natural causes.
Areas outside the Mariposa Grove are burning hot and do not enjoy the same fuel reduction as the grove of ancient trees, but those areas need to burn, as they haven’t seen fire for more than 130 years at this point.
But the beloved giants of Mariposa are safe for now. With the lesson that fuel reduction works hopefully a beacon of light in these wildfire-choked summers.
Way to guys. Keep them going till I can get there!
JT
Enough of the obsolete 100% NPS “hands off” policy, finally.
When fires are human caused, it’s crazy to let these irreplaceable groves face any risk at all.
So yay fuel reduction! Let’s get the funding shoved through to catch up in the rest of the parks so that we can truly preserve these National Parks for the future. They have been starved of basic maintenance for decades and it’s criminal.
On a happier note… The Trust for Public Land just bought, and donated the same day, 26 square miles to Hawai’i Volcanos National Park. It was threatened by developers. Now the burials, ancient village petroglyphs and endangered species are safe. Public is still excluded for now.
Al – I agree
The more we learn the more we realize that there are human fingerprints all over our wilderness. This includes global warming, past fire management (increasing fuel loads), microplastics, past logging changing the long-term composition of forests, pests like the emerald ash borer, and humans actually causing starting fires.
For the NPS to see humanity setting our wilderness areas up to fail, and then throwing up their hands to let nature take its course was always ridiculous.
Sidenote: I went to Volcanoes National Park a few years back with my wife and loved it. My three year old son asks me about it all of the time, because he thinks it is super cool that we were inside a volcano. I think his mental picture might be a bit different than the reality of the visit.
I’ve been thinking of and concerned for this grove during the fire, so what a relief to read this update. Thank you, AJ!