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Pine Donkey

BAER

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We made another trip to Nutrioso this past weekend. The monsoons have begun to heal the forests, and they look very different then just a few weeks back. Three weeks ago everything was black, and now much of the grass has returned. This picture along highway 180 near the AZ/NM border shows the vivid green "new" growth.

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We were very fortunate to have front row seats to one of the BAER teams, who are using helicopters to spread straw on the severely burned hillsides. They have set up one of their operations about 50 yards off my parent's back deck. This morning, we were educated on the project by one of the very friendly pilots. Not only did he discuss the operation over a cup of coffee, he took my friend's (MJE1) young son over to his helicopter, let him sit in the pilot's seat, and made a memory that will last his lifetime.

 

During our discussion, he gave us a lot of information:

 

There are several arial straw projects in the burn area. After fixed-wing planes reseed the area, his team covers it with straw. They place straw on all the severe burned areas with slopes between 15 and 50% grades. The project will take about 7 weeks total, staying at each staging area for 2-5 days. In the short time in this staging area they plan to spread 40 semi-trucks of straw (800 tons) on the ridges around Gobbler Peak, and Rodger's Reservior. Prior to setting up at this location, they were in Auger Canyon where they spread 80 trucks (1600 tons) of straw on the hillsides of Auger Canyon and Noble Mountain.

 

The entire project will require over 2000 trucks of straw (40,000 tons). The straw is coming from Yuma, CO, UT, NE, OK, KS, and TX. In the pictures below, the darker straw is hail and tornado damaged straw from the wheat fields in Kansas. At the site, semi's line up to be unloaded, while one crew cuts the bail cord, stacks, and breaks up the bails. Another crew spreads out the nets and uses large John Deere tractors to pile straw on them. As a helicopter arrives with an empty net, a third crew disconnects that net and reconnects a full net. This is done in two different areas about 75 yards apart. In one area they use Hueys that lift about 3000lbs per load, in the other they use large workhorse helicopters that lift 5600lbs (at 8000 ft elevation). As you can see from the video, the exchange of nets takes under thirty seconds in this efficient operation.

 

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They entire operation was very interesting and well coordinated with 4 helicopters in the air at a time.

 

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Here is a video I took today.

Sorry it is sideways, there was a collision between my limited video and technologic knowledge.

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That's some interesting stuff. Thanks for sharing. Glad things are looking up. :)

 

TJ

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Dang TJ, do you sleep with you laptop? :lol:

 

lol... I work second shift and just got home a little while ago. A cold beer and my winding down time before another 12 hr day tomorrow. :)

 

TJ

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I was up there yesterday as well, pretty cool to see those helicopters go to work. TONS OF COW ELK IN THE MEADOWS as well!

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wow nice to see the forest coming back around.

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They've completed dropping straw along the east fork of the Little Colorado River through Greer, but while it was going on my wife and I and a few friends enjoyed a great lunch last week while watching the operation from the patio at the Peaks. Next up is a project to scatter seed along that ridge from fixed-wing aircraft, we've been told.

 

Bill Quimby

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Don't you normally put seed down and then put the cover on top? I've heard that the USFC was unable to get the seed in the time frame they needed so they just proceeded with the straw.....seems like another waste of money to me.

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