“The density of this, it’s just a wall. It’s a giant wall,” said Kyle Smith, forest manager with The Nature Conservancy of Washington.
Spinning rod of metal teeth
Forest managers are using a tool to help bring this area back to how it was 100 years ago. The tool is about the size of a tractor, with a spinning rod of metal teeth.
“If you can imagine like mowing [a] lawn ... with a sweet riding lawn mower but out in the forest, it’s something like that,” said Connor Craig, who owns Wildfire Fuel Protection. The bumper of his company rig — parked nearby — reads, “Thin it or watch it burn.”
Craig isn’t just hacking down these trees. Forest managers have a plan.
“That kind of outlines the end result. Usually we’re seeing between 200 and 350 trees per acre,” Craig said.
Right now, there are between 800 and 1,000 trees per acre. They’re keeping a pattern of fire resistant trees, like ponderosa pine, Douglas fir and western larch, sometimes called tamarack. They hope to get rid of many more grand firs, which can grow densely in shady areas.
“We’re not trying to grow trees for Weyerhaeuser here. We’re trying to restore the forest, so we want it to be more of a mosaic landscape, where we have maybe a few trees that are 6 feet apart and then we have a 30-foot gap,” Craig said, gesturing to an already thinned hillside behind him.
Stopping fire
As the masticatorower gets to work chewing up the forest fuels, it’s spinning metal teeth take out whole trees at a time. It shreds branches and mulches leaves. What’s left half an hour later looks a lot like how this forest appeared a century ago.
The newly created space between trees should stop a big fire from jumping across the tops of trees (known as crowning in firefighting lingo). It should slow the fire and provide enough of a buffer to give firefighters a place to catch it before it burns down to the homes below.
Connecting different projects — like these large-scale fuels management ones — with efforts by homeowners down below helps make the landscape more resilient. It’s part of a larger effort to help Central Washington avoid the fate of towns like Paradise, California, which was devastated by the Camp Fire in 2018.
“I think people look at California and think, ‘Oh good. That’s not us,’ ” said Reese Lolley. “It could be us.”
Lolley is the director of forest restoration and fire with The Nature Conservancy in Washington. He has similar forest mastication projects planned for the other side of Interstate 90, leading into the small Kittitas County towns of Roslyn and Ronald.
It’s all about upping the “pace and scale” of forest restoration, Reese said. The Nature Conservancy recently identified 2.7 million acres of Eastern Washington forests that need to be thinned mechanically or through prescribed fire. Washington’s Department of Natural Resources plans to thin about 1.25 million acres through a 20-year plan to improve forest health.
“It’s important that we look at how we’re treating a stand, as well as how we’re connecting it in the larger landscape,” Lolley said, looking out at Cle Elum in the distance.
He said that’s especially important as climate change is predicted to increase Northwest fire risks and the length and severity of the fire season.
Down the hillside, the state land managers are working with property owners to ensure their land is also more fire resilient. It’s important to connect the two landscapes, said Jason Emsley of the Department of Natural Resources. After all, fire doesn’t know property boundaries.
“The scale and the amount of work that needs to be done to the landscape is just so massive right now that we’re behind the ball,” Emsley said. “So we’re trying to ramp up to get back ahead of the problem eventually.”
Here in the upper Kittitas Valley, they’re thinning parts of the forest along the only gravel road in and out of this neighborhood. That should create breaks for firefighters to station themselves and help slow fires. They’re also helping property owners make sure their homes are prepared when a fire strikes in this highly hazardous area.
“If just one person does work, it doesn’t necessarily accomplish the task. And so all of us working together is what it’s going to take for our communities to become more fire adapted going forward.” Emsley said.
Worries about her property
Being fire adapted is the goal of this work along Buffalo Springs Road, where six people own property and two live here full-time.
Patty O’Hearn lives here most of the year. Her 22-acre property could be the cover of a firewise magazine: metal roofs on her cabin and shed, thinned trees, mowed grasses, gravel walkways lining her home.
From the expansive view of her back porch, she saw both the 2012 Taylor Bridge and 2017 Jolly Mountain wildfires work their way toward towns and neighborhoods in the valley.
She worries about her property; it’s not a question of “if,” but rather “when” a fire will burn through her hillside. O’Hearn said she’s doing what she can to help protect her land and neighbors, even if there’s more work to be done. O’Hearn has a few projects in mind.
“In particular keeping the brush under control. I’m on a steep slope, so there’s a little bit more concern for me if there were a crown fire,” she said.
Work like this is all happening now across Central Washington to help prepare the forest, homes and towns for the next fire, said The Nature Conservancy’s Lolley.
“What we haven’t recognized as much as in communities is that every individual has a role in the sense of preparing for fire before, during and after,” he said.