Archive for the 'Gardening' Category

Logging Companies In Georgia Play An Important Role In Forest Management

Monday, November 2nd, 2009
Daniel Marcus Manson asked:


If you’ve been anywhere near a television, radio, newspaper or computer in the past few weeks, there’s no way you could have missed hearing about the raging California wildfires. The Station fire, as it’s been named, has burned through well over 160,000 acres north of Los Angeles. To date, that fire has claimed two lives, injured eight other people, destroyed over 100 buildings and has threatened thousands of homes and businesses. Perhaps even more disconcerting is the fact that the Station fire is only the eighth largest wildfire in California during the past century.

Forest fires occur virtually anywhere and at any time. California, Georgia, Florida, or New York, spring, summer, winter or fall; it really doesn’t matter, although hot and dry is the prime condition. Fires start from any number of natural sources, lightning being the main one, but arson and accidental fires are not uncommon either. What many people have a hard time understanding, though, is that fire is actually an important part of the natural forest cycle. Forest fires have been happening as long as there have been forests. A number of plants, including some of the big conifer trees, have evolved to require the heat of a fire in order to reproduce. Natural fires have always helped the health of forests; a quick wildfire burning through a forest would reduce deadwood, diseased trees, scrub and dried leaves, leaving the more vigorous trees unscathed with more room to grow. In other words, fires were Nature’s forest management tool. Mammoth fires on the scale of the Station fire that physically destroy everything in their path were relatively rare in the past. What’s changed in the equation is human intervention.

By constantly battling to put out any forest fires and fighting to preserve trees at all cost, humans have, in many cases, unwittingly created the ideal conditions for massive, destructive forest fires. Many progressive wood lot owners have turned to an unlikely ally to prevent this from happening. Logging companies, frequently demonized by conservationists, often have the expertise in forestry management that can help to prevent catastrophic forest fires. Using progressive techniques like selective thinning (which can also financially benefit the owner of the wood lot) or even controlled burns, these companies can restore a cluttered wood lot to a more natural state, removing excess fuel and helping ensure that any wildfires don’t spiral out of control.



PHILLIP

Landscapes That Resist Fire

Thursday, December 4th, 2008
Joshua Santor asked:


There should be a correct way to landscape the property to prevent any cause of wildfire in the area. There are instances when wildfire strikes without your being aware that it will occur. Most wild fires happen in rural areas where there are great risks for wildfire. A properly landscaped property can be a good defense for surviving destruction or damage.

A homeowner should be aware on the safety of ones space and surroundings. A well-planned landscape can make the property safer from any wildfire strikes. Here are some preventive measures to lessen the risks of wildfires.

1.    Provide a space clear of vegetation around the property; this will serve as a good defense against wildfires. The capacity of a house to survive the fire is its accessibility for firefighters to operate conveniently to kill the fire.

2.    Make the landscape free from any tall grasses and shrubs that can cause a large fire. Place any combustible materials like the fuel and trash that are prone to fire in an enclosed storage area

3.    Landscape properly by giving enough space for plants that are near the house and place the plants that grow slower and are shorter closer to the house.

4.    It is recommended that there should not be large masses of plants in a particular area. Instead, designate specific spaces for the plants where they are in clusters and pots.

5.    The design of the landscape would even look better, if there are decorative rocks placed in every space where there are not plants. Rocks and gravel can slow the flow of the fire and prevent the continuity of any fuel flow to the fire.

6.    Lessen the weed growth and limit the moisture by using organic and inorganic mulches. It is not advisable to use pine barks on landscapes because they have pine needles, which are thick enough to fuel the fire.

7.    An allowance of 8 inches should be allotted from the house for grass that needs to be mowed. It is better if the grass is farther away from any structure. Wildflowers should be well maintained and irrigated regularly. Place more gravel around grasses and put some stepping stone pathways on the way to the area garden area.

People should be aware of the steps necessary to prevent fire and have defensible spaces against wildfires that may occur. There is a proper way to landscape the property without destroying the design that is coordinated with the house. Always make sure that safety comes first for more convenient and enjoyable living.



DEANDRE