‘It’s a lot of trees’: Unknown number of trees cut in Nevada County for wildfire mitigation efforts - California finally does some forest management, hand-wringing ensues

1652415702966.png
Trees lay alongside Highway 20, east of Nevada City, last month as Caltrans crews work on wildfire mitigation efforts along the state route. The trees are being chipped and used as biomass.
Photo: Elias Funez
Logging is not the money making industry it once was in Nevada County, but amid wildfire mitigation efforts, tree trunks are the new property accessory.
After hydraulic mining and the logging industry’s cross-cutting technique removed Nevada County’s native species, the forests in the Northern Sierra Nevada became overstocked with red and white fir, states a Northstar Fire Department report published in May. Since, the Sierra Foothills have acquired, “a dense understory of seedlings, brush and downed woody material.“

TREE REMOVAL EFFORTS

Public and private agencies continue to remove an unknown number of trees and shrubs — including blue oaks and manzanita — in Nevada County.

Combined with Caltrans and PG&E’s storm cleanup efforts following the late December storm, Caltrans’ de-vegetation effort can be seen along Highways 49, 20 and 174, Caltrans Public Information Officer Raquel Borrayo said.
CalTrans awarded a $3.7 million contract to Tyrell Resources for tree removal following the snowstorm with a precipitation total that broke records in the Nevada City and Grass Valley area. Some residents of the region went over 16 days without power, Borrayo said, and the number of.downed trees required that Caltrans implement emergency tree removal to address the fallen, leaning or hazardous trees on various routes.

Tyrrell Resources cleared debris and hazardous trees on Highways 20, 49, 80, 174, and 193 in Nevada, Yuba, Sierra, El Dorado and Placer counties. Borrayo said the contract anticipates the work will conclude this month.
Per Caltrans construction, the removed trees are relocated to Lincoln’s Rio Bravo Rocklin Biomass facility.
As of April 1, Tyrrell Resources sent “approximately 300 loads of wood chips to Rio Bravo Rocklin.”
Each of the 300 loads weighs approximately 24 tons, Borrayo said, meaning that by April 1, the contractor ultimately yielded 7,200 tons of wet wood chips.

Separately, Caltrans maintenance crews are performing brush removal and fuel reduction measures on eastbound Highway 20.
“They are starting just east of Penn Valley and are working their way towards the Ponderosa Overcrossing,” Borrayo said. “Once completed, they will then head westbound on State Route 20 from the Ponderosa Overcrossing to Penn Valley.”
There, Caltrans crews are removing scrub brush and trees 4-inches wide or less at chest height.
“The work is dependent on weather and fire restrictions — red flag days,” Borrayo said. “We are also coordinating with our environmental team to mark any environmentally sensitive areas prior to brush removal along the highway.”
Manzanita is mulched, Borrayo said, leaving the red humus one can see from the roadside behind.
“We’re chipping into sawdust/mulch for ground cover,” Borrayo said.
Neither the trees removed as part of Caltrans’ de-vegetation effort nor those removed by the emergency contractor are being counted, Borrayo said.

“It’s a lot of trees,” Borrayo said.
PG&E has also committed to remove 1 million trees across 70,000 miles of serviceline across Central and Northern California.
The utility company’s 2022 wildfire mitigation plan does not specify the number of trees being cut within county or city boundaries. When asked to specify the number of trees getting the ax in Nevada County, Communications Specialist Megan McFarland said she did not have the number.

PERSPECTIVES

Jamie Hinrichs, public affairs specialist for Tahoe National Forest, said she was aware of Caltrans’ tree removal on Highway 20.
Hinrichs said she is not sure how much, if any, of the tree removal done along the roadsides has been paid for by the federal agency.
“The Tahoe National Forest specifically supported and engaged in wildfire mitigation work, (including addressing) hazardous vegetation on wildland-urban interface … where communities are really close to federal forested land,” Hinrichs said.
Hinrichs said part of that work is removing younger trees so that prescribed fire can be used on the landscape.
“Low intensity fire that can be used in a way that really mimics the fire ecosystem in California,“ Hinrichs said. “Using a little fire now is a way to mitigate a larger fire later — you remove some of the surface vegetation, and there are spaces between big trees so they don’t burn.”
Hinrichs said vulnerable communities need to do what they can to create egress routes.
“That’s why a lot of tree removal work is focused along roads and highways,” Hinrichs said.
Hinrichs said the appearance of trunks or visibility of sky through a usually thicketed forest region does not necessarily indicate anything unhealthy.
“You think more trees is always better, but actually density of forest is not healthy,“ Hinrichs said, adding, ”it’s not healthy for the forest. It’s also increased fire risk.“
Hinrichs said forests were much thinner hundreds of years ago than they now appear to be.
“It’s like a straw in the ground — the more straws in the ground, the more trees are sucking up water,” Hinrichs said. “Since California is in a prolonged drought, it makes the trees competing with limited resources more susceptible to insect infestation.”
Hinrichs said that leaving dead trees standing leaves local communities at risk in the case of an electrical storm.

OVERSIGHT

Terrie Prosper, director of the California Public Utilities Commission’s news office, said California created a new state agency specifically dedicated to reducing the risk of utility equipment starting wildfires called the Office of Energy Infrastructure Safety.
“Vegetation management is one of the ways that utilities, including PG&E, reduce that risk,” Prosper said, adding that all the company’s mitigation activities were documented in a plan submitted in February.
PG&E’s safety performance is being continually assessed by the CPUC, Prosper said, adding that the commission has “taken enforcement actions against the utility, including activation of the Enhanced Enforcement Oversight Process specifically designed for PG&E due to its record of safety failures.”
According to Prosper, PG&E is in the first step of the commission’s Enhanced Enforcement Oversight Process “based on the company’s failure to sufficiently prioritize clearing vegetation on its highest-risk power lines as part of its wildfire mitigation work in 2020, and we will continue to utilize this escalating oversight process based on PG&E’s safety performance.
“The CPUC required PG&E to submit a corrective action plan and report on progress every 90 days,” Prosper added. “CPUC staff are currently evaluating PG&E’s latest report to determine whether it has made sufficient progress toward meeting its goal.”

 
Last edited:
>inb4 some retard Californian screams about 'saving the trees' while ignoring the 5th wild fire they have in their shithole of a state caused by lack of proper forest husbandry
Man, you'd think with the overabundance of tree the article mentions you'd think it would have been easy to find a company to turn them into a useful product before this... right? Right?

Oh, who am I kidding, this is CA, where #everytreeissacred.
 
>inb4 some retard Californian screams about 'saving the trees' while ignoring the 5th wild fire they have in their shithole of a state caused by lack of proper forest husbandry
I am the Retard. I speak for the trees. I speak for the trees, for the trees have no OH MY FUCKING SHIT I'M ON FIRE I'M BURNING UP!!!!! AAAAUUUGGGHHH!!!!!
 
To be fair, it is a fire ecosystem when the entire fucking state erupts into wildfires 5 times a year.
And this is better than Tornado/Hurricane Alley which covers 1/3 of the US??? Oh fuck no. And then those Hurricanes that miss the Caribbean head up the Atlantic Coast. Yea... yay!!! Then of course you have your seasonal flooding on the Mississippi that of course you got a 1 in 4 chance that it will flood during... Hurricane Season.

How about the fucking BAD winter when you go outside you have a chance to have your nipples, lips, eyeballs frozen off because you don't have the right gear on? Again fuck that shit.

Besides I consider it as a cleansing sort of thing. We just need to learn to aim those flames to burn those hipsters to the ground.

kill-it-with-fire_o_626748.jpg


So what you people are saying that California is... Satan's Country since God has his eyes on the rest of the Nation... so lets hit this with an angry fist of God as well. ;)

fistofangrygod1.jpg
 
How many fucking saw mills are in that area and what is the price of lumber at right now? They can't stack them into or ship them off to lumber mills? Especially since that's why they were planted in the first place? This is the specific species used for basic dimensional lumber. No, lets just shred it all into "biomas" to compost and throw the ecosystem in a nitrogen deficient system. Fucking idiots.
 
How many fucking saw mills are in that area and what is the price of lumber at right now? They can't stack them into or ship them off to lumber mills? Especially since that's why they were planted in the first place? This is the specific species used for basic dimensional lumber. No, lets just shred it all into "biomas" to compost and throw the ecosystem in a nitrogen deficient system. Fucking idiots.
Anything that could help the American people or the American economy is against the beliefs of the powers that be.
 
And this is better than Tornado/Hurricane Alley which covers 1/3 of the US??? Oh fuck no. And then those Hurricanes that miss the Caribbean head up the Atlantic Coast. Yea... yay!!! Then of course you have your seasonal flooding on the Mississippi that of course you got a 1 in 4 chance that it will flood during... Hurricane Season.

How about the fucking BAD winter when you go outside you have a chance to have your nipples, lips, eyeballs frozen off because you don't have the right gear on? Again fuck that shit.

Besides I consider it as a cleansing sort of thing. We just need to learn to aim those flames to burn those hipsters to the ground.

View attachment 3276520

So what you people are saying that California is... Satan's Country since God has his eyes on the rest of the Nation... so lets hit this with an angry fist of God as well. ;)

View attachment 3276554
The difference between those examples, and California is.....the fires in California can easily be prevented, or the scale can be extremely mitigated if they stopped acting like a bunch of fucking hippies, and practiced good forest husbandry. Clearing out dry underbrush, cutting down old/dead/diseased trees that catch fire easily, removing the eucalypts trees with stupidly flammable oil, etc.
 
Only a brain dead Californian would talk about "Fire ecosystem."
Na, California does have certain species that require fire. The sequoias come to mind. No fire, and the sequoia cones don't open, and the sequoias themselves have significant natural resistance to fire in their outer layers. The state's ecosystem has literally evolved to be on fire at a certain rate, and before man ever set foot there. Its less that fire is an ecosystem and more that the ecosystem depends on fire.
The difference between those examples, and California is.....the fires in California can easily be prevented, or the scale can be extremely mitigated if they stopped acting like a bunch of fucking hippies, and practiced good forest husbandry. Clearing out dry underbrush, cutting down old/dead/diseased trees that catch fire easily, removing the eucalypts trees with stupidly flammable oil, etc.
This. We fucked with the natural ecosystem, and are now shocked that it attempts to revert to equilibrium the same way nature always does: destructively.
 
The difference between those examples, and California is.....the fires in California can easily be prevented, or the scale can be extremely mitigated if they stopped acting like a bunch of fucking hippies, and practiced good forest husbandry. Clearing out dry underbrush, cutting down old/dead/diseased trees that catch fire easily, removing the eucalypts trees with stupidly flammable oil, etc.


20220514_194021.jpg
At least in Australia we actually try to mitigate the fire risks. We have massive fire breaks at random throughout our forests, just in case. As you have probably seen, it doesn't always work, but it'd be so much worse if we did nothing.
 
View attachment 3280625At least in Australia we actually try to mitigate the fire risks. We have massive fire breaks at random throughout our forests, just in case. As you have probably seen, it doesn't always work, but it'd be so much worse if we did nothing.
See, that's smart. Unfortunately the people deciding forestry policy in California are not smart. They don't care how much of the state burns down so long as they can blame global warming for it. See, they all live along the coastline, far, far away from the forests, so they'll never have to deal with the consequences.

EDIT: Its late and I need to crash out and get some rest, but the TL;DR is that the California wilderness naturally catches fire thanks to excessive dryness in summer and mild, relatively damp winters. We have since built up the area, planted firs and other trees for harvesting in quantities beyond that which the area naturally supports, and as a result fires become stronger than that area used to have. Now, this wouldn't be a problem if we adopted sensible clearance methods to eliminate brush build up and logging to clear out those over-abundant firs and the like, and did controlled burns every so often to clear out places loggers can't or won't reach, but that would cause air pollution and release carbon, and we can't do that. We'd also need to operate motor vehicles in the area to ensure it didn't get out of hand, and wouldn't you know it but a significant portion of those areas have combustion engines under restrictions ranging from moderate to outright prohibition. And not just motor vehicles, but even equipment as basic as gas generators and chainsaws.
1652526781426.png

A hefty chunk of that mountainous land in the Northeast and down south along the border with Nevada is under environmental protections of one sort or another, and guess which part likes to catch fire?

So, California burns as it naturally wants to do, and everyone makes shocked Pikachu faces when human infrastructure burns with the wildlife.
 
Last edited:
How many fucking saw mills are in that area and what is the price of lumber at right now? They can't stack them into or ship them off to lumber mills? Especially since that's why they were planted in the first place? This is the specific species used for basic dimensional lumber. No, lets just shred it all into "biomas" to compost and throw the ecosystem in a nitrogen deficient system. Fucking idiots.
Anything that could help the American people or the American economy is against the beliefs of the powers that be.
Is this a bureaucratic issue? Not only would you help mitigate the spread of wildfires, you could sell it to contractors or at the very least as firewood AND you'd be creating jobs that weren't there initially.
 
  • Like
Reactions: FierceBrosnan
To be fair, it is a fire ecosystem when the entire fucking state erupts into wildfires 5 times a year.
Yeah, a forester would talk about "fire ecosystem", but only a braindead Californian could think that it can be made compatible with modern living in the same environment through just good vibes and literally hugging the trees.

It's like living in the Mississippi floodplain, and thinking the best method of flood mitigation is not maintaining levees but appeasing the Water Gods by fining everyone for excess storm drain runoff. And when that doesn't work? Running around in circles and panicking that the glaciers must be melting from global warming, your plan was FLAWLESS until everyone else messed it up.
 
Last edited:
Back