Nebraskaland

Nebraskaland June 2020

NEBRASKAland Magazine is dedicated to outstanding photography and informative writing with an engaging mix of articles and photos highlighting Nebraska’s outdoor activities, parklands, wildlife, history and people.

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42 Nebraskaland • June 2020 throughout the Pine Ridge. With a system of fi rebreaks, the hope is to at least limit the size of wildfi res. "We're building those box sides and communicating them to area fi re departments," McCartney said, as he points to a map of the Pine Ridge with areas shaded in various colors to show projects in progress and completed. "Absence of a commodity to pay for the work, this is the best approach; the best bang for our buck." A primary focus area of the collaborative eff ort has been the U.S. Highway 385 corridor, which runs north and south through the ridge near Chadron and features many private tracts interspersed among public land. Through cooperation between the Nebraska Forest Service, Game and Parks, the U.S. Forest Service and the many landowners, a large buff er has been created through thinning. In the event of another large wildfi re, the area will be invaluable in eff orts to stop it from moving east or west. An area of emphasis in the collaboration has been Chadron State Park. Situated along the highway, it had experienced valuable thinning prior to 2012 and, though that year's fi re burned through much of the park, it did not charge eastward. Since then, the park has undergone more thinning and the removal of burned trees. The Strategy of Thinning For thinning, land managers are strategic in selecting trees to cut. Gerlach prefers an approach he calls "groupy- clumpy." With that method, trees are not spaced uniformly throughout large areas, but rather in small groups. This approach keeps crown fi res from spreading, yet lessens the likelihood that the trees will be uprooted or damaged by the wind. The groups of trees also serve as a seed source. Gerlach said about 2,200 acres have been treated on state wildlife management areas in the Pine Ridge with thinning and removal of "ladder fuels," the brush and other vegetation that helps fi res climb trees. The other big public land organization in the Pine Ridge, the U.S. Forest Service, has completed about 4,000 Pine Ridge Shared Stewardship Project Areas Nebraska Forest Service – complete/in progress United States Forest Service – complete/in progress Nebraska Game and Parks Commission – complete/in progress 2006 and 2012 fi re perimeter A map created by the Nebraska Forest Service shows shared stewardship forestry project areas near Chadron.

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