Summer cleaning

July 18, 2006


One of the scarier things about summertime, especially during the driest months, is the chance of major fire damage. After living in South Dakota – with the Black Hills just a few hours away – and frequenting Wyoming – where Yellowstone once darkened the sky for months on end – I’m used to hearing about major fires. They’re destructive. They’re frightening.

They’re natural.

Still, I can’t help but be alarmed when something so beautiful – the forests of Yellowstone, of the Black Hills, and now of the Boundary Waters Canoe Area – is threatened. One day, you’re looking at hundreds of years of growth, trees that have stood for nearly a century, which converted the carbon dioxide of World War II and provided the oxygen that has helped the last four generations breathe. The next day, it’s charred, turned into charcoal.

It’s necessary, I know. Many tree seeds don’t sprout unless the older growth has been stripped away, needing extreme heat and a clear sky to prosper, to repopulate and spread like the fire that tore down their predecessors. But there’s nothing as horrifying as staring into a once dense forest to see nothing but black toothpicks, shells of a former living organism – not just the individuals trees, but the entire ecosystem, itself one large living being that provides shelter, food, and supplies for thousands of animals.

My greatest camping memory is of the Boundary Waters. It was a grueling battle against nature at times. My boot filled with mud, and my feet became tired and sore. I went to bed shortly after sundown, and woke up shortly before sunrise. I cycled my patterns with the wilderness, eating dried Thai food and drinking sips of Jameson. I learned a lot about the forest. I learned a lot about my personal limits. And then I shattered those limits.

Now, I’m watching it burn from afar. A 1999 storm knocked down enough kindling to keep the fires raging. The lack of constant population has forced an air of uncertainty over the entire area. No one knows how far the fire has gone, and you’d be stupid to try to find out.

There’s nothing more dangerous than when Mother Nature cleans house. And the Boundary Waters Canoe Area has needed a summer cleaning for a while now. But that still doesn’t make it any easier to watch.

Tags: Outdoors |

3 Comments

Comments

3 Responses to “Summer cleaning”

  1. Ryan on July 18th, 2006 119 pm

    That fire looks crazy! Apparently it is jumping over lakes, sometimes using islands sometimes not. Everything is so dry it is just bursting into flames. Pretty scary, could you imagine being up there right now, with only a canoe and your own two feet? Some of the reports from the firefighters up there describe the most intense fire they have ever seen. It’s all part of the life of a forest, but scary none the less.

  2. eric on July 18th, 2006 130 pm

    i think that my friend jeff, you know him from linus, might be up there fighting it now. at least that is part of his job this summer, but i’m not sure he’s been sent up there yet.

  3. roberta on July 20th, 2006 1140 am

    my house is always really messy. maybe if i just burn it down it will clean itself up? things that make you go hmmm…

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