What Caused the Delay in "Craggy Project" Planning?

"Many of us [Forest Service employees] had already spent long hours working through the Salmon Salvage Project (2014) and the Westside Fire Recovery Project (2016) and were reluctant to take on another large project, especially one that would require meeting an accelerated timeline. I also knew that putting forth a post-fire project would mean putting other green projects on hold, potentially risking having other areas burn in the future that could have been treated had we not reallocated resources for this project."

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Klamath Siskiyou
It's Time to Pull Together

Not everyone needs to agree about every aspect of fire management. Fire behavior is a complex field and its okay to reach different conclusions and hold different beliefs. But even in crisis, there are many opportunities for us to pull together.

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Klamath Siskiyou
Understanding Wildfire in the Klamath-Siskiyou

Some research shows the region’s forested landscapes were generally more open due to fire prior to the 20th century than they are today and today’s landscape is characterized by denser forests, less structural diversity, more fire-sensitive species, fewer coarse-grained vegetation mosaics, and a greater likelihood of high-severity fire (particularly in previously open ponderosa pine forests).

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Eight Dollar Mountain: A Botanical Area Not an OHV Playground

Over this past weekend KS Wild and our strong team of volunteers assisted the Forest Service and spent two days repairing and closing illegal routes made by OHV users near the base of Eight Dollar Mountain. We picked up and hauled away 2 truck loads of trash, closed various routes, and installed 'Botanical Area Restoration' signage along the roadway. 

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The Dirty Truth Behind the Clean Slate Timber Sale

The new management plan for BLM forests no longer offers protections for old-growth dependent critters like the red tree vole. Under the old plan areas subject to timber harvest were surveyed for Red Tree Voles so that nesting sites could be protected. This is no longer the case. Though the BLM has no guidance telling them that they cannot continue to survey for Red Tree Voles, they are choosing not to using a “log without looking” policy.

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Klamath Siskiyou
A poem for the emerging spring:

While the darkest day of the year is past, and nefarious forces in the White House continue threatening  public lands, we think its a good time to step back and appreciate some of the bigger, natural forces at work in the bioregion. Big thanks to KS Wild volunteer Barbara Comnes for sharing this poem.

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Klamath Siskiyou
Merkley Meetings 1/15/18 in Curry and Josephine Counties


Make your voice heard: Join your local community in Curry and Josephine County to speak out to Senator Merkley!  Now is a critical time for southern Oregon to engage and support issues that matter to our forests, environmental laws, and communities. 
 

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Did the Forest Service learn from the Biscuit fire (2002)?

What have we learned since the 2002 Biscuit fire aftermath, and how will it affect land management decisions in the post-Chetco Bar burn area of southwest Oregon?

...with the passage of time it is now possible to look back more objectively at Biscuit fire and the political firestorm that followed in its wake.

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The damage of post-fire logging, the Hoax of 'salvage'

A forest after fire is not a tragedy; it’s simply a stage in the life of the forest. Post-fire logging is  often framed as focused on fire prevention. In reality, important biological characteristics are removed from post-fire forests. Because of this, salvage logging acts as an unnatural human disturbance to the sensitive post fire landscape.

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Groundbreaking KS Wild Climate Change Report

Fighting fossil fuel projects like the proposed Jordan Cove liquefied natural gas export project is only half of the climate change battle in our region. Climate change is getting worse fast so we also have to act to prepare the Klamath-Siskiyou for a warming world. KS Wild has just assembled the best available science in a comprehensive report to help show the path forward to help public lands adapt to climate change.

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Climate, Water, WildlifeGuest User