Willamette Valley Prescribed Fire: September 2013
The Map above depicts the location of the 2016 prescribed fire perimeters.

Wednesday, September 18, 2013

Spires Ecological prescribed fire planned for Thursday September 19, 2013


On Thursday September 19, 2013 The Bureau of Land Management in conjunction with the City of Eugene and the Rivers to Ridges partners are planning to burn the Spires units (unit 4).

If you would like to receive pre-burn notification for a particular unit, please contact Michael Mascari at mmascari@blm.gov or (541) 683-6415. We will also have a fire information line at 541-683-6970. We will post updates throughout the burn season on the Willamette Valley Prescribed Fire Facebook page; go to http://www.facebook.com and search for “Willamette Valley Prescribed Fire.” Interactive maps are also hosted on our new blog site www.willamettevalleyprescribedfire.blogspot.com.

Before any prescribed burn can be done, a detailed fire management plan must be developed. This rigorous process determines the acceptable conditions under which burns can be carried out. “Prescriptions” are developed for each of the areas to be burned that dictate under what weather conditions (relative humidity, wind speed and direction, air temperature, and moisture content of the vegetation) a burn can be safely managed. If  weather conditions are unacceptable on the day of a planned burn, the burn will be postponed. 

conducting prescribed burns

A prescribed burn will begin only when all of the criteria listed in the prescription are met and adequate personnel and equipment are present. Burns are ignited using drip torches, portable canisters used to drop small amounts of flame along the fire breaks. The fire is  lit in such a way to take advantage of the current weather conditions to ensure the flames travel in a specific direction. A variety of equipment is used to control the fire, such as hand tools, backpack water pumps, and large-capacity water pumper trucks. An individual prescribed burn is almost always completed in one day, usually over a few hours. At each burn, emergency fire suppression equipment, including water pumper trucks, are available. This equipment can be used to quickly extinguish the fire if weather conditions change or if the fire threatens to escape control.Prescribed burns are typically conducted by an array of partners, all whom have been trained to ignite and suppress wildland fires. 




Spires is Ecological Burn unit 4




Tuesday, September 10, 2013

September 10, 2013 at 11:27



Boot with Meadowlark in the background 


Boot completed 12:15

All three units were completed today. Firing was completed at 2:30 pm and personnel are currently are currently moping up all units.


Monday, September 9, 2013

Ecological burned planned for tomorrow September 10, 2013

On Tuesday September 10, 2013 The Bureau of Land Management in conjunction with the City of Eugene and the Rivers to Ridges partners are planning to burn the boot and Meadowlark unit then possibly Dragon Fly bend. 

Before any prescribed burn can be done, a detailed fire management plan must be developed. This rigorous process determines the acceptable conditions under which burns can be carried out. “Prescriptions” are developed for each of the areas to be burned that dictate under what weather conditions (relative humidity, wind speed and direction, air temperature, and moisture content of the vegetation) a burn can be safely managed. If  weather conditions are unacceptable on the day of a planned burn, the burn will be postponed. 

conducting prescribed burns

A prescribed burn will begin only when all of the criteria listed in the prescription are met and adequate personnel and equipment are present. Burns are ignited using drip torches, portable canisters used to drop small amounts of flame along the fire breaks. The fire is  lit in such a way to take advantage of the current weather conditions to ensure the flames travel in a specific direction. A variety of equipment is used to control the fire, such as hand tools, backpack water pumps, and large-capacity water pumper trucks. An individual prescribed burn is almost always completed in one day, usually over a few hours. At each burn, emergency fire suppression equipment, including water pumper trucks, are available. This equipment can be used to quickly extinguish the fire if weather conditions change or if the fire threatens to escape control.Prescribed burns are typically conducted by an array of partners, all whom have been trained to ignite and suppress wildland fires.