Since
summer 2002, Council volunteers have worked thousands of hours in
a variety of activities aimed at making the communities of Idyllwild,
Pine Cove and Pinyon more fire safe. The major impetus of their work
came near the end of a four-year drought which created conditions
for a major bark beetle infestation which has caused unprecedented
tree mortality in the San Bernardino National Forest. Not only has
there been a huge glut of timber from removal of the dead trees from
both the forest and private property, but the existence of the dead
trees in such unparalleled numbers has brought about a risk of fire
that is historic in size. Council members worked more than 450 man-hours
to produce 45 cords of firewood this last winter which were donated
to the Idyllwild HELP Center for use by needy families on the Hill.
These efforts not only helped many low-income families get firewood
to heat their homes during a long and cold winter, they also meant
that the U.S. Forest Service had a lot less timber it had to be responsible
for disposing of by burning or other means.
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major Forest Service project now underway which is designed to
protect the northwestern perimeter of the Idyllwild/Pine Cove
area is the Pine Cove Fuel Break. Started by Forest Service staff,
this shaded fuel break has been substantially contributed to by
crews of Council members averaging 10 to 15 men and women in size.
Their work has included removing manzanita trees and brush and
doing other clearance work in the Gibbs Gully area.
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Working
two days a week from March - June 2003, Council members provided well
over 1,000 man-hours of work on the project. It is believed their
efforts will be a considerable contribution toward the Forest Service
plan to try and complete the entire fuel break in about a year’s
time, an important goal considering the current fire risk on the Hill.
The work done by Council members is considered especially significant
since the Gibbs Gully area is a natural chimney leading into the community
from the forest. Providing an adequate fuel break there will give
fire agencies a prime opportunity to stop a wildfire from wiping out
first, Pine Cove, and then, Idyllwild.
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In
both the log-splitting and Pine Cove Fuel Break projects, Council
members have contributed much more than just hundreds of hours
of labor. They also have donated equipment
and services worth thousands of dollars. This includes the use
of a professional log splitter, chain saws, trucks and trailers,
an all-terrain vehicle, a tractor and the cost of repairing and
maintaining all of this equipment. Also, there has been a sizable
administrative component involved in calling, supervising and
organizing the volunteer crews, as well as keeping track of the
hours they have worked. |
It
is expected this project will be completed in Spring 2004 with the
clearing of the remaining slash and the final step of planting some
new trees to replace the vast number lost in this effort to create
a shaded fuel break.