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Backpacker Magazine – June 2001
Years and even decades after a forest fire, the healed land tells amazing tales about the benefits of flame.
THE DAY AFTER
Immediately after a fire, it may seem that no burning questions about its cause and effect exist. The local newspaper and rangers will already have stated the facts. The sharp observer can glean more information from the scene, however. For instance, inspection of a tree's charred remains can reveal the state it was in when it burned.
THE DECADES AFTER
Years later, you can still decipher when fire last hit an area. The easiest way is by observing the flora and fauna that returned. As blazes level tall trees and undergrowth, holes are left in the forest canopy, "so all of a sudden you have sunlight hitting the forest floor," explains Jack Cohen, Ph.D., a fire physicist at the Intermountain Fire Research Laboratory in Missoula, Montana. "This produces a profusion of shrubs, flowers, and shade-intolerant plants like fireweed, and the soil in these areas is rejuvenated. More insects come in, as do animals that forage on the plants and bugs. This brings in the predators, like wolves and bears, to prey on ungulates."
Other signs of a past fire:
RECURRING FIRES
You can guess how often fire occurs in an area by looking at the vegetation. Trees in frequent fire areas (a fire cycle of 20 years or less) grow thick bark to resist heat, and they also self-prune, or drop their lower branches. Douglas firs, ponderosa pines, and redwoods fit this description. When fire sweeps through, the downed wood, rather than living trees, is consumed.
In areas of infrequent fires (a 70- to 400-year fire cycle), the trees aren't as well adapted to flames. They have thin bark and their bottom branches usually remain intact even when dead. Fire quickly burns up this "ladder" of branches and sets the crown of the tree alight. Subalpine firs and Engelmann spruces generally indicate areas of longer fire cycles.
Even with all this fire knowledge, you can be misled easily by the many variables in nature. "There are no rules, only general principles (in fire succession), and there are exceptions to every principle," cautions Dr. Cohen.
Still, you should now be able to decipher a forest well enough to understand your surroundings, and in the end, that's what makes a hike most fascinating and memorable.
Steven Hawley assisted with this article.
Online Extra: Firewalking
Some 84,000 fires blazed through the West during the summer of 2000. Does that mean all the great hiking spots west of the Mississippi went up in smoke? Hardly. Plenty of destinations were untouched. Those that were kissed by flames offer a peek at an ancient cycle older than man and a fundamental truth of nature: Destruction breeds rebirth. Follow one backpacker who rediscovered a landscape he thought he knew. Then check out seven hikes that'll take you to the heart of last summer's flash points.

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