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Tag: vegetation

  • Early adopters of ‘zone zero’ fared better in L.A. County fires, insurance-backed investigation finds

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    As the Eaton and Palisades fires rapidly jumped between tightly packed houses, the proactive steps some residents took to retrofit their homes with fire-resistant building materials and to clear flammable brush became a significant indicator of a home’s fate.

    Early adopters who cleared vegetation and flammable materials within the first five feet of their houses’ walls — in line with draft rules for the state’s hotly debated “zone zero” regulations — fared better than those who didn’t, an on-the-ground investigation from the Insurance Institute for Business and Home Safety published Wednesday found.

    Over a week in January, while the fires were still burning, the insurance team inspected more than 250 damaged, destroyed and unscathed homes in Altadena and Pacific Palisades.

    On properties where the majority of zone zero land was covered in vegetation and flammable materials, the fires destroyed 27% of homes; On properties with less than a quarter of zone zero covered, only 9% were destroyed.

    The Insurance Institute for Business and Home Safety, an independent research nonprofit funded by the insurance industry, performed similar investigations for Colorado’s 2012 Waldo Canyon fire, Hawaii’s 2023 Lahaina fire and California’s Tubbs, Camp and Woolsey fires of 2017 and 2018.

    While a handful of recent studies have found homes with sparse vegetation in zone zero were more likely to survive fires, skeptics say it does not yet amount to a scientific consensus.

    Travis Longcore, senior associate director and an adjunct professor at the UCLA Institute of the Environment and Sustainability, cautioned that the insurance nonprofit’s results are only exploratory: The team did not analyze whether other factors, such as the age of the homes, were influencing their zone zero analysis, and how the nonprofit characterizes zone zero for its report, he noted, does not exactly mirror California’s draft regulations.

    Meanwhile, Michael Gollner, an associate professor of mechanical engineering at UC Berkeley who studies how wildfires destroy and damage homes, noted that the nonprofit’s sample does not perfectly represent the entire burn areas, since the group focused specifically on damaged properties and were constrained by the active firefight.

    Nonetheless, the nonprofit’s findings help tie together growing evidence of zone zero’s effectiveness from tests in the lab — aimed at identifying the pathways fire can use to enter a home — with the real-world analyses of which measures protected homes in wildfires, Gollner said.

    A recent study from Gollner looking at more than 47,000 structures in five major California fires (which did not include the Eaton and Palisades fires) found that of the properties that removed vegetation from zone zero, 37% survived, compared with 20% that did not.

    Once a fire spills from the wildlands into an urban area, homes become the primary fuel. When a home catches fire, it increases the chance nearby homes burn, too. That is especially true when homes are tightly packed.

    When looking at California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection data for the entirety of the two fires, the insurance team found that “hardened” homes in Altadena and the Palisades that had noncombustable roofs, fire-resistant siding, double-pane windows and closed eaves survived undamaged at least 66% of the time, if they were at least 20 feet away from other structures.

    But when the distance was less than 10 feet, only 45% of the hardened homes escaped with no damage.

    “The spacing between structures, it’s the most definitive way to differentiate what survives and what doesn’t,” said Roy Wright, president and chief executive of the Insurance Institute for Business and Home Safety. At the same time, said Wright, “it’s not feasible to change that.”

    Looking at steps that residents are more likely to be able to take, the insurance nonprofit found that the best approach is for homeowners to apply however many home hardening and defensible space measures that they can. Each one can shave a few percentage points off the risk of a home burning, and combined, the effect can be significant.

    As for zone zero, the insurance team found a number of examples of how vegetation and flammable materials near a home could aid the destruction of a property.

    At one home, embers appeared to have ignited some hedges a few feet away from the structure. That heat was enough to shatter a single pane window, creating the perfect opportunity for embers to enter and burn the house from the inside out. It miraculously survived.

    At others, embers from the blazes landed on trash and recycling bins close to the houses, sometimes burning holes through the plastic lids and igniting the material inside. In one instance, the fire in the bin spread to a nearby garage door, but the house was spared.

    Wooden decks and fences were also common accomplices that helped embers ignite a structure.

    California’s current zone zero draft regulations take some of those risks into account. They prohibit wooden fences within the first five feet of a home; the state’s zone zero committee is also considering whether to prohibit virtually all vegetation in the zone or to just limit it (regardless, well-maintained trees are allowed).

    On the other hand, the draft regulations do not prohibit keeping trash bins in the zone, which the committee determined would be difficult to enforce. They also do not mandate homeowners replace wooden decks.

    The controversy around the draft regulations center around the proposal to remove virtually all healthy vegetation, including shrubs and grasses, from the zone.

    Critics argue that, given the financial burden zone zero would place on homeowners, the state should instead focus on measures with lower costs and a significant proven benefit.

    “A focus on vegetation is misguided,” said David Lefkowith, president of the Mandeville Canyon Assn.

    At its most recent zone zero meeting, the Board of Forestry and Fire Protection directed staff to further research the draft regulations’ affordability.

    “As the Board and subcommittee consider which set of options best balance safety, urgency, and public feasibility, we are also shifting our focus to implementation and looking to state leaders to identify resources for delivering on this first-in-the-nation regulation,” Tony Andersen, executive officer of the board, said in a statement. “The need is urgent, but we also want to invest the time necessary to get this right.”

    Home hardening and defensible space are just two of many strategies used to protect lives and property. The insurance team suspects that many of the close calls they studied in the field — homes that almost burned but didn’t — ultimately survived thanks to firefighters who stepped in. Wildfire experts also recommend programs to prevent ignitions in the first place and to manage wildlands to prevent intense spread of a fire that does ignite.

    For Wright, the report is a reminder of the importance of community. The fate of any individual home is tied to that of those nearby — it takes a whole neighborhood hardening their homes and maintaining their lawns to reach herd immunity protection against fire’s contagious spread.

    “When there is collective action, it changes the outcomes,” Wright said. “Wildfire is insidious. It doesn’t stop at the fence line.”

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    Noah Haggerty

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  • Hedges Fire: Yuba County structure fire spreads into vegetation, evacuation warnings lifted

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    Hedges Fire: Yuba County structure fire spreads into vegetation, evacuation warnings lifted

    Updated: 4:36 PM PDT Sep 15, 2025

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    A fire at a Yuba County residence on Monday spread into nearby vegetation, briefly prompting evacuation warnings, according to Cal Fire. Firefighters responded to the Hughes Fire at the residential structure near Frenchtown Road and Hedges Way. An AlertCalifornia camera around 4 p.m. showed that the smoke plume from the fire had thinned out since the fire was first reported.Cal Fire said one structure was fully involved and the flames spread across two to five acres of surrounding vegetation.The Yuba County Sheriff’s Office initially issued evacuation warnings for nearby streets and neighborhoods, but as of 4:15 p.m., the warnings were lifted.Under an evacuation warning, residents are advised of a potential threat to life and property. There is a potential for a warning to be upgraded to an evacuation order, when residents need to immediately evacuate an area due to an imminent threat.| MORE | A 2025 guide for how to prepare for wildfires in California | Northern California wildfire resources by county: Find evacuation info, sign up for alertsCal Fire wildfire incidents: Cal Fire tracks its wildfire incidents here. You can sign up to receive text messages for Cal Fire updates on wildfires happening near your ZIP code here.Wildfires on federal land: Federal wildfire incidents are tracked here.Preparing for power outages: Ready.gov explains how to prepare for a power outage and what to do when returning from one here. Here is how to track and report PG&E power outages.Keeping informed when you’ve lost power and cellphone service: How to find a National Weather Service radio station near you.Be prepared for road closures: Download Caltrans’ QuickMap app or check the latest QuickMap road conditions here.See more coverage of top California stories here | Download our app | Subscribe to our morning newsletter | Find us on YouTube here and subscribe to our channel

    A fire at a Yuba County residence on Monday spread into nearby vegetation, briefly prompting evacuation warnings, according to Cal Fire.

    Firefighters responded to the Hughes Fire at the residential structure near Frenchtown Road and Hedges Way.

    An AlertCalifornia camera around 4 p.m. showed that the smoke plume from the fire had thinned out since the fire was first reported.

    Cal Fire said one structure was fully involved and the flames spread across two to five acres of surrounding vegetation.

    The Yuba County Sheriff’s Office initially issued evacuation warnings for nearby streets and neighborhoods, but as of 4:15 p.m., the warnings were lifted.

    Under an evacuation warning, residents are advised of a potential threat to life and property. There is a potential for a warning to be upgraded to an evacuation order, when residents need to immediately evacuate an area due to an imminent threat.

    | MORE | A 2025 guide for how to prepare for wildfires in California | Northern California wildfire resources by county: Find evacuation info, sign up for alerts

    See more coverage of top California stories here | Download our app | Subscribe to our morning newsletter | Find us on YouTube here and subscribe to our channel

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  • Wildfire destroys 13 homes in Northern California as heat wave continues

    Wildfire destroys 13 homes in Northern California as heat wave continues

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    A wildfire that broke out near Oroville last week amid California’s record-breaking heat wave destroyed 13 homes and more than a dozen other buildings, state fire officials said.

    The Thompson fire arrived Friday in lockstep with a heat wave that parked itself over the West, setting the stage for the fire to sustain itself on brush and vegetation in extreme heat and dry winds in Butte County. Over the weekend, it grew to 3,789 acres before it was declared 100% contained on Monday by the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection.

    “The word that our fire chief has been using to describe the fire is stubborn,” Cal Fire spokesperson Rick Carhart said. “The fire broke out on a day that was extremely hot, quite windy and the humidity was almost nothing.”

    The fire was fanned by 20 mph north winds and burned through steep terrain, putting a strain on firefighters battling the flames.

    Thirteen single-family homes were destroyed, five homes were damaged, and 13 other buildings were also destroyed, according to Cal Fire. Two firefighters have been injured, Carhart said. There have been no reports of civilian injuries.

    Though the Thompson fire is contained, the lingering heat wave sets the stage for more dry conditions with extreme heat that could drive more fast-moving wildfires and stretch firefighting resources thin. Temperatures on Tuesday continued to linger 10-15 degrees above average across huge swaths of the state and show no signs of letting up until the weekend.

    “That prolonged heat really makes a big difference that stresses the vegetation and especially the firefighters,” meteorologist Alex Tardy with the National Weather Service in San Diego said.

    Among the other fires in the state, the Vista fire in the San Bernardino National Forest is burning through steep terrain near Mt. Baldy and Wrightwood, the U.S. Forest Service said.

    The fire nearly doubled in size overnight and has burned 1,095 acres since it started Sunday afternoon in steep, remote terrain. Details on the fire’s containment were not immediately available.

    Temperatures around the fire near Mt. Baldy, which is around 7,000 feet in elevation, will reach up to the 90s on Tuesday, according to the National Weather Service. Firefighters can also expect to see noticeable wind gusts, but they should follow a predictable pattern, rising in the day and dropping at night, Tardy said.

    The area is flush with vegetation now in the heat after a strong rainy season.

    “That area near Lytle Creek is the wettest part of the mountain with a lot of vegetation,” Tardy said. “That means a lot of fuels are already in place.”

    The severity and persistence of this heat wave is unprecedented, according to meteorologists, setting several records for high temperatures across the Golden State and the Western United States.

    Lancaster and Palmdale continued to stretch their all-time record of consecutive days at or above 110 degrees, reaching five days on Monday, according to the National Weather Service. The prior record for both Antelope Valley cities was three days.

    Las Vegas is expected to break its all-time record for consecutive days at 110 degrees or above, hitting five days in a row Monday. The current record is 10 days in a row, but forecasts show temperatures will remain that high through next week, easily toppling the previous record.

    Several other areas, including Madera and Needles, also hit daily their record highs on Monday, according to the National Weather Service. Palmdale reached 112 degrees on Monday, recording above normal temperature for the fourth day in a row.

    Madera hit 110 degrees, beating a record by three degrees; Merced hit 109 degrees, inching past its daily record from 1921; Las Vegas hit 115 degrees, one degree above its prior July 8 record set in 2021; and Needles, in the Mojave Desert, hit 123 degrees, breaking its July 8 record from 2017 by three degrees.

    In Santa Barbara County, a wildfire forced residents near Figueroa Mountain to leave their homes as authorities issued evacuation orders Monday.

    The Lake fire continues to burn on the western edge of the Los Padres National Forest amid record low levels of moisture, according to the U.S. Forest Service. The fire was first reported Friday afternoon northeast of the city of Los Olivos and has burned 26,176 acres since then to become the biggest fire in California so far this year, officials said.

    The fire is burning near Zaca Lake and several residential properties including the Sycamore Valley Ranch, formerly Michael Jackson’s Neverland Ranch. Firefighters reported 12% containment as of Tuesday morning.

    An evacuation is in effect for parts of Figueroa Mountain, south of Tunnel House at Sisquoc River, east of Figueroa Creek, north of the southern end of Cachuma Mountain, and west of Los Padres National Forest areas, officials announced on Monday. Though most of the fire’s growth overnight occurred in isolated pockets of forest, it pushed evacuation warnings Tuesday to the edge of communities in Los Olivos and Santa Ynez and triggered expanded evacuation orders to Goat Rock, east of Figueroa Creek, north of the U.S. Forest Service entrance at Happy Canyon Road and south of Cachuma Mountain.

    The National Weather Service issued a red flag warning for the area Tuesday afternoon because of high winds and extreme heat.

    “It’s hot, dry and stronger winds are in effect today,” said fire behavior analyst trainee Dan Michael with the Interagency Incident Management team responding to the fire.

    Even at night when fire activity usually dies down, the Lake fire has remained active because it’s burning on top of mountain ridges where it can be 30 degrees warmer or more than lower elevations, Michael said.

    “The marine layer comes in and it’s not able to reach where the fire is burning,” Michael said. “The conditions are much worse at night.”

    Los Angeles Times staff reporter Grace Toohey contributed to this story.

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    Nathan Solis

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  • Sacramento crews stop American River Parkway fire, Business 80 reopens

    Sacramento crews stop American River Parkway fire, Business 80 reopens

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    Crews have stopped a vegetation fire that burned along the American River Parkway in Sacramento.The fire started just before 4:00 p.m., just west of the Capital City Freeway. A Caltrans camera at Business 80 and Elvas Avenue showed a thick, black plume of smoke. According to the Sacramento Fire Department, the fire burned three acres. A KCRA 3 crew saw the fire burn up to the freeway.Both directions of Business 80 were briefly closed at the American River bridge, but they reopened just after 5 p.m.Multiple resources, including a helicopter, were called in to fight the fire.

    Crews have stopped a vegetation fire that burned along the American River Parkway in Sacramento.

    The fire started just before 4:00 p.m., just west of the Capital City Freeway. A Caltrans camera at Business 80 and Elvas Avenue showed a thick, black plume of smoke.

    According to the Sacramento Fire Department, the fire burned three acres.

    A KCRA 3 crew saw the fire burn up to the freeway.

    Both directions of Business 80 were briefly closed at the American River bridge, but they reopened just after 5 p.m.

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    Multiple resources, including a helicopter, were called in to fight the fire.

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  • Crystal Fire: 4 firefighters hurt battling Napa County vegetation fire

    Crystal Fire: 4 firefighters hurt battling Napa County vegetation fire

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    Four firefighters were hurt while responding to the Crystal Fire burning in Napa County on Wednesday, Cal Fire said. Forward progress has been stopped on the fire, which broke out near the 200 block of Crystal Springs Road in St. Helena Wednesday afternoon and threatened structures in the area. Cal Fire said at 9:47 p.m. that the fire had burned 60 acres and was 65% contained. Air and ground resources were being used to knock down the fire. The Napa County Fire Department also responded. The firefighters who were hurt were treated for injuries related to the steep, rocky terrain and hot conditions, Cal Fire said. All are expected to be OK. Crews are expected to continue to work overnight.Triple-digit heat and wind gusts in Northern California have made grass fires more likely. See more coverage of top California stories here | Download our app.

    Four firefighters were hurt while responding to the Crystal Fire burning in Napa County on Wednesday, Cal Fire said.

    Forward progress has been stopped on the fire, which broke out near the 200 block of Crystal Springs Road in St. Helena Wednesday afternoon and threatened structures in the area.

    Cal Fire said at 9:47 p.m. that the fire had burned 60 acres and was 65% contained.

    Air and ground resources were being used to knock down the fire. The Napa County Fire Department also responded.

    The firefighters who were hurt were treated for injuries related to the steep, rocky terrain and hot conditions, Cal Fire said. All are expected to be OK.

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    You may be able to find the same content in another format, or you may be able to find more information, at their web site.

    Crews are expected to continue to work overnight.

    Triple-digit heat and wind gusts in Northern California have made grass fires more likely.

    See more coverage of top California stories here | Download our app.

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  • Use your hair to help your garden or fight pollution. A Bay Area group shows how

    Use your hair to help your garden or fight pollution. A Bay Area group shows how

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    Try answering this off the top of your head: What’s an abundant renewable resource that can spur growth in your garden and clear pollutants from bodies of water?

    The answer, according to a Bay Area nonprofit, is hair.

    Matter of Trust, an ecologically focused group in San Francisco, has been using hair for more than two decades to clean up oil spills and other pollution from bodies of water. Its latest project is encouraging the growth of vegetation in the Presidio in San Francisco, a national park site.

    Matter of Trust is using hair to encourage the growth of vegetation in the Presidio in San Francisco.

    (Matter of Trust)

    The group got its start after learning about Phil McCrory’s hairy idea in the ’90s.

    The inspiration came to McCrory, a hair stylist in Alabama, when he was washing a client’s locks as CNN was showing images of otters covered in crude oil from the Exxon Valdez tanker that slammed into an Alaskan reef in 1989.

    McCrory realized that in his hands was a fiber that soaks up oils, according to Lisa Gautier, founder of Matter of Trust. But after the haircut, it would be swept up, trashed and dumped in a landfill.

    Gautier and McCrory became partners. He developed a way to turn hair, fur, wool or fleece into mats to absorb petroleum. Later, they discovered that the material could be stuffed into recycled burlap sacks and pantyhose to make booms or mats that would soak up oil.

    The idea was put to the test in 2007, when a 926-foot cargo ship, the Cosco Busan, sideswiped a support on the San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge. The collision opened a nearly 100-foot-long gash on the side of the ship, causing 58,000 gallons of heavy bunker fuel to leak into the ocean.

    Within hours, Gautier said, she and her team coordinated hundreds of volunteers to place hair-infused booms and mats along San Francisco’s beaches.

    To try to get rid of the waste the booms and mats collected, the team subjected them to two composting methods: worms and thermophilic fungi, or heat-loving bacteria and fungi that can kill pathogens by generating high temperatures. After about 18 months, the hazardous waste was turned into healthy compost, Gautier said.

    The hair mats’ latest job, at the Presidio, will test their fertilizing capabilities.

    The Matter of Trust team places hair into the soil of its vegetables to aid in composting and vegetation

    Hair can be formed into mats that soak up oil or can be used as mulch.

    (Matter of Trust)

    In a pilot study, the hair mats are being used as a mulch on the patchy park land. The results surprised the Presidio Trust’s associate director, Lew Stringer, SFGate reported.

    “The sections we planted using that material as substrate clearly grew more robustly than the control areas,” Stringer said.

    Bay Area and Los Angeles residents who compost or want to boost the vegetation on their property can use human or pet hair. It’s lightweight, and you can put it on top of the soil in your flower pots and garden, Gautier said. If the hair is longer than 2 inches, bury it in the soil to avoid entangling birds’ feet, she recommends.

    If you want to donate hair to Matter of Trust, sign up on the organization’s website, the Hum Sum. Gautier said the group accepts all human, pet and synthetic hair but asks that the various types be packaged separately.

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    Karen Garcia

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  • Two giant sequoias scorched in a controlled burn last year are now expected to survive

    Two giant sequoias scorched in a controlled burn last year are now expected to survive

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    Two beloved giant sequoias that were scorched in a prescribed burn at Calaveras Big Trees State Park last year now appear likely to recover.

    The damage to the ancient trees — named the Orphans — had drawn outrage from some members of the Northern California mountain communities that surround the park, who accused staff of failing to adequately prepare the forest before setting it alight. Officials said they took the proper precautions but that the trees appeared to have been weakened by years of drought, making them more susceptible to a pulse of heat that roasted their massive trunks and killed much of their canopies.

    In October, a team of experts hiked to the Orphans to examine them. Both had plenty of green in their crowns and had regrown foliage since the fire, said Kristen Shive, a fire ecologist and assistant professor at UC Berkeley who has studied how much crown damage giant sequoias can sustain.

    “I saw two very happy living trees,” she said. “I expect both of them to survive.”

    The Orphans, which are at least 500 years old, got their names because they are set apart from other sequoias in the grove. The broccoli-topped giants have long towered over the smaller trees that surround them.

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    But the burn that took place last October and November, which was intended to cull vegetation that could fuel a damaging wildfire, blackened their enormous copper-colored trunks and turned most of their green tops brown.

    Still, the burn achieved a key goal: regeneration, said Danielle Gerhart, district superintendent of California State Parks’ Central Valley District. Giant sequoias rely on fire to reproduce — their cones open and release seeds only in response to bursts of heat, and flames expose mineral soil in which those seeds can germinate.

    People walk through Calaveras Big Trees State Park

    People hike to the Orphans in Calaveras Big Trees State Park to pray for their survival.

    (Dominique Williams / Modesto Bee)

    As a result of the prescribed burn, thousands of sequoia seedlings are growing beneath the Orphans, Gerhart said. Many will eventually perish as they compete for sunlight and water, but a few might grow into the next crop of monarchs.

    “We have to have fire that’s hot enough to be able to create that regeneration, and that to me is really exciting,” she said. “It literally is a carpet of green underneath and they’re all little babies.”

    Calaveras Big Trees is a haven for local residents, who describe a spiritual connection to the park’s cathedral-like sequoia groves. As the state’s longest continually running tourist attraction, it also serves as the area’s economic engine.

    Marcie Powers, former board member of the Calaveras Big Trees Assn., a nonprofit that raises funds for the park’s educational and interpretive programs, said she was thrilled to see new growth. She described the contrast between the trees’ baked crowns and fresh greenery as “stark and stunning.”

    After the Orphans were damaged, Powers resigned from the board to found Save Calaveras Big Trees with her husband. The group’s goal is to get the park to do more thinning, mastication and biomass removal, which they hope will reduce the risk of sequoias dying in both prescribed burns and wildfires.

    Powers pointed out that the long-term survival of the Orphans is not certain, as the fire weakened the trees and could still result in them succumbing to drought or beetle attacks in the years to come. She said the burn also killed some juvenile giant sequoias between 10 and 40 years old.

    “I still feel that had they been more vigilant, they might not have had such severe damage to the Orphans or to the dozen adolescent giant sequoias around them that were outright killed,” she said. “Only a few seedlings will make it to become monarchs, which is why it’s important to protect the ones we have.”

    Before the burn, crews raked leaves and needles away from the Orphans’ roots and cleared heavy vegetation and downed limbs within a 20-foot radius of their trunks, Gerhart said. Still, she said, it’s impossible to prepare the forest to the point where a prescribed fire carries no risk of mortality.

    “As much as none of us want that to happen, it is still a possibility,” she said. “Fire is not an exact science.”

    Even so, when any tree dies — including a giant sequoia — that reduces competition for resources, allowing other trees to thrive, she said.

    “I think the key is we have to start thinking about these as dynamic ecosystems again, rather than as museum pieces, where we naively think we can keep every single one of them around forever,” Shive said.

    She and other giant sequoia experts have watched the debate playing out between local residents and park officials with trepidation, fearing the backlash to the burn could jeopardize efforts to safeguard other ancient groves.

    Giant sequoias grow naturally only in a 60-mile band of forest on the western slopes of the Sierra Nevada. Though they need fire to thrive, they are no match for the massive, high-severity wildfires that have become more common over the last decade, scientists say. Nearly 20% of the giants’ population are estimated to have died in just three fires in the southern Sierra in 2020 and 2021.

    Experts blame a combination of climate change, the dispossession of Indigenous people who once stewarded the land and management decisions like aggressive fire suppression and industrial logging for creating denser, more flammable forests in the Sierra.

    These conditions are capable of stoking hotter, faster-moving fires that can race up into the crowns of sequoias, incinerating the massive trees. Without action to restore these lands to something more closely resembling their precolonial conditions, many more sequoias will be lost, the experts fear.

    “Part of how these forests evolved is with fire. By us excluding it all this time, we’ve created such a horrendous problem that a lot of trees are dying,” said Brent Skaggs, a contractor with the nonprofit Fire Restoration group.

    “We need to own up to that and take steps to restore fire back in these ecosystems,” said Skaggs, a retired Forest Service fire management officer for the Sequoia National Forest and Giant Sequoia National Monument.

    He acknowledged that even the most careful prescribed fire could kill some mature giant sequoias. But on balance, the practice is key to protecting the trees that remain from catastrophic wildfires that will wipe out much larger numbers, he said.

    “Folks love the Orphans,” he said. “I understand that — I love sequoias myself. There’s a worry, though, that if you don’t allow the natural process to occur because you love them so much, you’re going to love them to death.”

    Since the controversy, Calaveras Big Trees State Park has moved ahead with more prescribed burns, including a 39-acre one in the park’s North Grove last month that appears to have gone as planned, Gerhart said. A much larger, 1,300-acre burn is planned for the South Grove this fall. Officials had hoped to ignite it this week, but the area is still too wet from recent rains.

    Crews have been preparing for over a year by clearing vegetation away from the bases of giant sequoias, thinning and masticating smaller trees, hauling off large logs and reducing the amount of vegetation around a road that surrounds the burn area, Gerhart said.

    The uproar has redoubled the park’s commitment to transparency and public education, she added.

    “I think it just reminded us that the community cares so much and we are responsible for what’s going on in the park and we want to share that with people,” she said. “We’re all here together. We all live in this community.”

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    Alex Wigglesworth

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