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Fire wipes out Big Basin State Park's historic buildings. (Original Post) Adsos Letter Aug 2020 OP
:-( CentralMass Aug 2020 #1
Oh, that is so sad. I hope the youmg redwoods are safe. Delmette2.0 Aug 2020 #2
It is bad. Today they are evacuating the UC Santa Cruz campus still_one Aug 2020 #3
Oh, no. ladym55 Aug 2020 #8
That is part of what this election is about still_one Aug 2020 #9
Sad but the buildings should be well documented and can be accurately rebuilt dutch777 Aug 2020 #4
Coast redwoods are fire-adapted Zambero Aug 2020 #5
My god- I go to all those places, and have many cherished memories. NBachers Aug 2020 #6
PBS had a doc about a australian forest's rebirth after the big summer fire a few years ago. pansypoo53219 Aug 2020 #7

Delmette2.0

(4,164 posts)
2. Oh, that is so sad. I hope the youmg redwoods are safe.
Fri Aug 21, 2020, 03:35 PM
Aug 2020

I went through Yellowstone a few years after that horrible summer of fire in 1988. It was regenerating, that is nature's way. But, if there are repeated fires it may not recover for a long time.

ladym55

(2,577 posts)
8. Oh, no.
Fri Aug 21, 2020, 06:57 PM
Aug 2020

The news is just so awful on the fires, and this happens every year--earlier and earlier.

Gee, do you think we might have addressed climate change at some point??? Just askin.

dutch777

(2,993 posts)
4. Sad but the buildings should be well documented and can be accurately rebuilt
Fri Aug 21, 2020, 04:14 PM
Aug 2020

And the redwood trees are amazingly resilient to fire. As long as everyone is okay, it will probably all be okay with some effort and expense later.

Zambero

(8,964 posts)
5. Coast redwoods are fire-adapted
Fri Aug 21, 2020, 05:05 PM
Aug 2020

Larger trees tend to be more resistant to fire due to the species' thick self-insulating fibrous bark. Trees that succumb to high-intensity crown fires self-regenerate by way of stump sprouts. Survivors of intense fires pick up the slack with extra crown expansion and diameter growth over time. A remarkable species in many ways, beyond the staggering size of the older individuals.

NBachers

(17,096 posts)
6. My god- I go to all those places, and have many cherished memories.
Fri Aug 21, 2020, 05:26 PM
Aug 2020

There are plenty of images of centuries of forest fires amongst the old redwoods, but I know I'll be heartbroken at the sense of loss the next time I go down there.

Fire is actually part of the life cycle of these trees- Sequoias are resistant to fire; the seeds need the heat to pop open; the fire clears the ground and the ash restores nutrients for young seedlings to grow. It seems counter-intuitive, but it's been part of their survival and proliferation over the thousands of years they've been alive.

https://thekidshouldseethis.com/post/why-the-giant-sequoia-needs-fire-to-grow

https://www.savetheredwoods.org/grant/redwoods-regrow-after-fires/









pansypoo53219

(20,966 posts)
7. PBS had a doc about a australian forest's rebirth after the big summer fire a few years ago.
Fri Aug 21, 2020, 06:04 PM
Aug 2020

i so hope to see one on this ones rebirth. it will be green again. sad old buildings were lost. hope like europe they rebuild exactly like what was lost + not something new.

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