From the Ground Up

Page 1

Winter

Volume 2, Issue 4

2011

From the Ground Up A Gardening and Native Plants Quarterly

Colorado State University Extension-Pueblo County 701 Court Street · Suite C · Pueblo, CO 81003 · 719-583-6566 · coopext_pueblo@mail.colostate.edu KNOW YOUR NATIVES

BUT SO MANY TREES ARE BEING CUT DOWN! by Dave Van Manen, Mountain Park Environmental Center If you are wondering why so many trees in Pueblo Mountain Park are being cut down, and maybe thinking that the look of the park is really changing, you are not alone. Several folks have come to me with these concerns. Truth be told, I have had some of those same thoughts myself, even if it was ultimately my call to move forward with the Shaded Fuel Break project that has been underway in the park. Here’s my response, based on good science and informed opinions from multiple sources. The short answer: The look of the forests we’ve been seeing may be familiar, but they are not as they should be ecologically. Let me explain: If you were standing in what is now Pueblo Mountain Park 200 years ago, before a ―fire is bad‖ forest management belief came to this part of the world, what you would have seen then is not what you’ve been seeing in the park the last several decades. Frequent natural fires, usually caused by lightning during dry spells, would have maintained the park’s low-elevation ponderosa pine forests as much more open stands with far fewer trees per acre than what we’re used to. The fires were relatively cool and generally stayed near the ground, all because of the relative lack of fuel. Not that every acre of forest was uniformly open with exactly 40 or 60 trees per acre; there were clumps of higher density as well as meadows, due to varying causes. Enter fire suppression. Instead of a natural fire every ten years or so, killing many tree seedlings and keeping brush down, the fires were squelched, and forests began to grow, and grow, and Before and after grow. Often, fire suppression was accompanied by logging, not of photos of Ponderosa the many smaller trees, but the big ones…leaving even more fuel pine forest thinning in the form of smaller trees and dense brushy understory. at Pueblo Mountain Park. Photo credit So, when I moved to Beulah nearly 40 years ago, my L. McMulkin introduction to ponderosa pine forests was the unnaturally (above, 2006) and D. overgrown variety, what I and most of us are used to seeing, and Van Manen (left, 2011) expect to see, in the park and surrounding landscapes. One big problem with these dense forests is that, if a fire gets started, it readily moves up into the canopy and can consume thousands and even tens of thousands of acres of dense, fuel-laden forests (remember the Hayman Fire of Continued on page 2

INDEX Know Your Natives 1&2 Landscape Design Class 2 Harmonious Hardscapes 3 Library Resources 4 Soil Preparation 4 Wicked Weeds 5&6 Poinsettia care 6

Microclimates Christmas tree recycle Digging Deeper Interesting Insects Fabulous Families Western Landscape Garden Walks

7 8 9 10 11 12 12


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