Black Dome Mountain Sports Free Shipping on all orders over $75 1-800-678-2367 1-800-678-2367
Customer Service
View Backpack
Black Dome Store Asheville Outdoors Guide Raven's View Blog Checkout Now

Meet the Staff

Asheville Outdoors Guide

Our History

Store Hours & Locations

Contact Us

Raven’s View

Strange Rumblings from Our Twisted Employees

Park plans prescribed burn in Cataloochee

From the National Park Service, Great Smoky Mountains National ParkÂ

Park managers at Great Smoky Mountains National Park tentatively plan to conduct a prescribed burn on a 530-acre tract of forest bordering Cataloochee Valley near Maggie Valley, NC on Sunday, December 10. The burn is being conducted to help restore a natural, but increasingly rare forest type, and is expected to help create additional forage and habitat for the Park’s experimental elk population. The central purpose of the Park’s fire use in the interior regions of the Smokies is to replicate, as closely as possible, the role that naturally-occurring fires played in shaping and maintaining the Park’s diverse ecosystem. In the case of the Wash Ridge Burn the Park’s goal is to perpetuate and maintain the xeric oak forest community. The xeric forest type is made up of largely fire-tolerant species including black, scarlet, and chestnut oaks and various hickory species. The xeric forest canopy has numerous breaks that allow sunlight to reach the forest floor which supports a rich variety grasses and herbaceous vegetation and a diversity of wildlife.  This area was originally burned in April, 2004. The burn on Sunday will be the second of several restoration treatments required to maintain the xeric oak forest community. Until the mid-90’s, all fires within the Park had been vigorously suppressed for almost 70 years. One consequence of that long-term fire suppression was that areas that historically were xeric oak were being taken over by hemlock and maple which out -compete the oaks, but are much less fire-resistant. The new forest has a closed year-round canopy that allows little light to the forest floor, resulting in a decline of biological diversity. The planned burn is designed to reduce the density of hemlock and maple and to promote the regeneration of the xeric oak species. The area to be burned borders the open meadows of Cataloochee at the western end of the Valley. The burn area is contained by natural boundaries including the grassy meadow, two wet drainages, an old road, and by a short stretch of pre-dug fire control line. As a precaution, approximately 25 Park firefighters and 2 engines will be assigned to make sure the burn stays within its planned limits. Â

Â

Cataloochee Road will be closed to vehicular traffic from Shanty Branch to the Rough Fork Trailhead. Rough Fork Trail and Big Fork Ridge Trail, which border the southern end of the burn unit, will remain open during the burn. Fire personnel will be available to escort the public to these trails. Hiram Caldwell Cemetery will be closed to the public on Sunday, but the Dock Caldwell Cemetery east of Shanty Branch will remain open.

Additional information about fires in the park  Â

Â

Leave a Reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.