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Sunday, April 6, 2025

BLM Redding Field Office plans prescribed burning in fall and winter months

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Bureau of Land Management issued the following announcement on Nov. 12.

The Bureau of Land Management is planning prescribed burning projects  for the fall and winter months on public lands in Shasta, Butte, Tehama  and Trinity counties. Crews will ignite the pile burns and broadcast  burns only when weather and fuel conditions allow for safe and  successful burning and smoke dispersion. Smoke may be visible from  nearby communities during the projects.

“All of these projects are part of our commitment to sustaining  public lands important to our communities,” said BLM Redding Field  Manager Jennifer Mata.  “The projects are part of our work to improve  landscape health and to reduce the risk of catastrophic wildfire.”

An 81-acre project in the Weaverville Community Forest is scheduled  for this fall. Crews will use a broadcast burn to remove small branches  and brush left over from forest thinning projects. The carefully  managed, low-intensity fire will reduce wildfire danger and improve  forest health. Crews will follow up by burning 20 acres of brush piles  along Little Brown’s Creek Road. 

The BLM and Trinity County Resource Conservation District manage the  community forest in a partnership to maintain open recreational space  and to provide forest products, including lumber and firewood.

Also, crews will continue fuels reduction work and pile burning in  the Reading Indian Creek project area of Trinity County. This oak  woodland restoration project will also improve community evacuation  routes, access for emergency responders, and benefit forage for local  wildlife. 

Crews also plan to complete the Big Creek prescribed fire at Ewing  Reservoir near the community of Hayfork.  The fire will improve oak  woodland wildlife habitat and expand existing fuel breaks that help  protect the community against wildfires.

The Butte Thin prescribed fire project in Butte County will include a  110-acre understory burn north of DeSalba within a 131-acre forest  thinning project completed several years ago. Crews will also continue  pile burning in the same area to improve access and emergency response.  The project is designed to reduce wildfire risk by creating shaded fuel  breaks along Garland Road and Doe Mill Road.

The BLM also plans burning projects in the Upper Ridge Nature  Preserve near the community of Magalia in Butte County, where crews will  implement five acres of pile burning. The burns will clean up woody  debris from the Camp Fire.

In Tehama County, BLM crews plan to burn slash piles along Ponderosa  Way in the Campbellville area. The piles were created during earlier  forest thinning projects.

BLM teams will also work on pile burning projects to reduce hazardous  fuels along recreational trail corridors in Shasta County. Project  areas include the Chappie-Shasta OHV Area north of French Gulch, the  Sacramento River Rail Trail, Swasey Recreation Area and other areas of  public lands in the communities west and north of Redding. Workers will  remove fire and storm-damaged brush and small trees along the trails,  and make burn piles of brush and small trees removed during the work.

Additional information is available from the BLM Redding Field Office at 530-224-2100.

Original source can be found here.

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