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Grand Junction Times

Saturday, September 21, 2024

Cross-boundary fuel break and hazard tree removal to begin on Sheep Mountain

Treeremoval

Bureau of Land Management issued the following announcement on Nov. 10.

The Bureau of Land Management (BLM) and Colorado State Forest Service  (CSFS) are partnering to reduce wildfire risk and improve forest  health, wildlife habitat and public safety on the slopes of Sheep  Mountain in Grand County. Mechanical logging work on this project is  scheduled to begin immediately and be completed by December 15, 2023.  Hand treatments and pile burning are expected to follow logging  activities in this multi-year project.

The two agencies are using the Good Neighbor Authority program to  remove hazardous trees from the forest and create a large fuel break  extending across boundaries of BLM and private lands. During the first  phase of the project, crews will cut and salvage trees from 187 acres on  BLM-managed public lands and adjacent private property. Trees with wood  that is usable to make forest products will be sold. During the second  phase, crews will create a 200-foot-wide fuel break between the timber  harvest areas.

“We worked closely with local communities and the Colorado State  Forest Service to design and develop this project,” said BLM Kremmling  Field Manager Bill Mills. “It will reduce wildfire risk to our neighbors  and improve forest health, habitat for wildlife and public safety for  decades to come.”

The removal of standing dead, overly dense, and down trees is  expected to help slow the advance and reduce the intensity of fire,  allowing more options for fire crews to safely and effectively fight  fire and protect the adjacent Pole Creek Preserve, Valley at Winter  Park, and Fairways at Pole Creek subdivisions, Snow Mountain Ranch, and  the Pole Creek Golf Club of the Fraser Valley Metropolitan Recreational  District. The project will improve forest health and wildlife habitats  by allowing grasses, shrubs and seedling trees to flourish with less  competition for sunlight and more room to grow. Public safety will also  be improved by the removal of standing dead trees that can fall on  visitors to public lands in the Sheep Mountain area.

The native mountain pine beetle impacted nearly 3.4 million acres of  forests across Colorado from 1996 to 2014. During this mountain pine  beetle epidemic, Grand County was among the hardest hit areas, resulting  in 80 percent or higher mortality in most forested stands. This project  will help mitigate impacts from beetle-killed trees on Sheep Mountain.

“Bark beetles and wildfire don’t recognize property boundaries,” said  Zach Wehr, Supervisory Forester with the CSFS. “Spanning public and  private boundaries, this project demonstrates the critical need to work  together to successfully address forest health concerns.”

Both phases of the project are described within the 2020 Sheep  Mountain Fuel Break and Sanitation Salvage Environmental Assessment. The  document is available online at https://eplanning.blm.gov/eplanning-ui/project/1503382/510.

Signs will be posted in the project area to warn visitors of  activities. For more information about this project, contact CW Portell  at 970-724-3033 or cportell@blm.gov.

Original source can be found here.

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