November-December 2009

After the Fire

Emergency hydroseeding and hydromulching measures can stop erosion.

Article Tools

Create a Link to this Article

Photo: Apex Curb and Turf

By Steve Goldberg

Comments


Neither seeds nor fertilizer were used. As the Forest Service stated, “Research has shown that reseeding chaparral areas is usually counter-productive because the native vegetation will resprout faster and more effectively—and hold the soil in place better—if it doesn’t have to compete with introduced seeds. We are not using fertilizer, because it could contribute to an excess of nutrients in the water.”

Western States Reclamation was selected to handle the hydromulching, working with Aero Tech, Erickson Air Crane, and Wildlands Inc. Colby Reid, of Western States Reclamation, explains that crews treated 1,531 acres for the Forest Service and then another 1,000 acres for the Santa Barbara County Flood Control agency.

“It was all aerial hydromulching,” says Reid, “and it took just a little over a month to complete all the acreage. We had two operations going on at the same time. We had a fixed-wing operation with AT-802 Air Tractors flying out of the Santa Barbara airport, and then we had a Skycrane helicopter flying from the other side of the mountain off a private ranch over there. The airplane holds right at 800 gallons of slurry, and the Skycrane holds 1,800 to 2,000 gallons at that elevation.”

The projects were completed with no major problems, and not much retreatment was necessary. “We would touch up light spots,” Reid says, “but basically, it’s a one-pass application. They overlapped each other, each pass did. Of course, there’s a little touchup of some light spots and a little drift.”

The Forest Service closed the hydromulch-treated area to the public during the hydromulching operation and for the subsequent 12 months, to prevent disruption to the regrowth. The area has slowly begun to revegetate, and Forest Service time-lapse photos of one limited area particularly show growth beginning in February and March of 2009.

Photo: HydroSprout
Hydromulch is applied to a steep slope.

Big Spring and Trigo Fires
New Mexico’s Cibola National Forest, near the border with Mexico, is home to stands of ponderosa pine, mixed conifer, gambel oak, and pinyon-juniper. Early in the morning of April 15, 2008, a small fire, reported at approximately 10 acres in size, was observed in the extremely steep and rugged Trigo Canyon portion of the forest. Crews were immediately dispatched to the scene, but high winds hampered fire-control efforts, and by evening the fire had spread to cover 100 acres.

Five days later, the burn had grown to 1,350 acres, and by the time it was essentially contained, a month after its start, the wind-driven fire had scorched more than 13,000 acres of forest land. Then, on June 23, 2008, about five miles away, lightning sparked the Big Spring fire. This event reached nearly 5,500 acres before being contained nine days later. Hundreds of residents had been forced to evacuate their homes.

“These were extremely hot-burning fires. They just basically disintegrated everything up there,” says John Larson, owner of Apex Curb and Turf in Washington state.

The US Forest Service selected Larson’s firm to help stabilize the area. It was challenging work.

Advertisement

“For the Trigo fire, we started on June 26, and we finished the project on July 2. We were dealing with all those big rains and it just gets crazy down there,” he says. “It rained and flooded it out. We couldn’t even get to the site at times in any kind of vehicle.”

Fifteen hundred acres needed to be treated with straw mulch, at a rate of 2,000 pounds per acre. Larson enlisted the help of Leading Edge Aviation of Clarkston, WA, to handle the aerial mulching operation. “We were lifting off through trees,” Larson says. “It was pretty crazy.” Next Page >

What Do You Think?

Post a Comment

Be the first to tell us what you think!

Post a Comment

Not a subscriber? Sign Up
 
 
*  
 




 

Get Erosion Control E-mail Updates!

Get weekly news and updates through our Erosion Control e-mail newsletter!