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2008

Sequoia & Kings Canyon National Parks, Sequoia National Forest and Giant Sequoia National Monument
Dillonwood Fire Exercise Prepares Sequoia & Kings Canyon National Parks and Sequoia National Forest and Giant Sequoia National Monument for Interagency Fire Management
National Fire Plan – Accountability *

Helicopter 552: I see three lightning fires from the storm. They are in the North Fork of the Tule drainage. All are about one-half acre in size and about one-half mile south Sequoia National Park. Fire behavior is moderate with mainly creeping fire...

Managers from Sequoia & Kings Canyon National Parks, Sequoia National Forest, and Giant Sequoia National Monument participated in a fire simulation exercise at Ash Mountain Recreation Hall in Sequoia National Park on April 7, 2008.

The exercise, designed by Sequoia National Park District Fire Manager Dave Allen and Tule River Ranger District Fire Manager Paul Gibbs, helped park and forest managers consider actions they would take when wildland fires cross the two agency’s boundaries. In the past five years, there have been four fires that have crossed park and forest boundaries.

The exercise challenged managers to determine their response when lightning fires on the Sequoia National Forest and Giant Sequoia National Monument, Tule River Ranger District spread onto National Park Service land in Dillonwood. Issues they needed to respond to in the intensive four-hour scenario included:

  • Poor access to the fire area (including access to historic cabins)
  • Unnatural fuels including slash piles caused by previous logging practices when the Dillonwood unit was private land - this led to increased fire activity potential near historic structures
  • Cultural resources located in the fire area
  • Managing smoke to consider impacts to nearby residents and visitors
  • Fire in sequoia groves - sequoias thrive and germinate in a natural fire cycle
  • Differing land management objectives of each agency

The exercise included initial briefings with maps of the fires and the area they were located, updates on weather, fire spread and behavior, and an opportunity to visualize the fire area in three dimensions through a sand table replication.

Left: Sand Table Exercises like this one help land managers visualize simulated fire exercises by replicating landscape, forest and fuel types, fire spread, available firefighting response, weather, and other factors. Right: Priscilla Summers, Tule River & Hot Springs District Ranger, and Sequoia National Park District Fire Management Officer Dave Allen discuss their options for managing fire across agency boundaries.

“This exercise was an excellent opportunity for us to discuss and consider these types of events prior to them happening. We were able to determine what actions we could depend upon each other for. After all, we know that natural processes like lightning fires do not stop at the artificial boundaries we have placed,” said Craig Axtell, Sequoia & Kings Canyon National Parks Superintendent.

“It provided us a means to meet, learn about the shared issues we face as land managers, and better understand how our interagency response will play out. It also gave us better tools to initiate a response when the scenario becomes reality,” said Priscilla Summers, Tule River & Hot Springs Ranger District Ranger.

Contact: Deb Schweizer, Fire Communication and Education Specialist
Phone: (559) 565-3703

*This story supports the National Fire Plan

Rafters floating on Green River below fire on nearby butte.

Dinosaur NM
by Doug Ross

Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Parks
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