[Az-Geocaching] Fire Lookouts - Off-Topic and Long

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Author: Team Tierra Buena
Date:  
To: az-geocaching
Subject: [Az-Geocaching] Fire Lookouts - Off-Topic and Long
Since there's been so much on this listserver lately about the drought
and fire situation, I thought many of you would be interested in this
article plagiarized from Sunday's New York Times.

Steve
Team Tierra Buena
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As Forest Homes Rise, Keen Eyes Seek Smoke
By BLAINE HARDEN


NORTHPORT, Wash. - There is nothing newfangled about Gayle Kaste. For 25
consecutive summers, despite two hip replacement operations and cataract
surgery on both eyes, she has been working on a wooden tower here in the
heavily forested northeast corner of Washington State.

"I call in every little smoke I see," said Mrs. Kaste, 74, known among
local firefighters for spotting fires fast and locating them precisely.
"Heavens, I don't go anywhere without my field glasses."

Mrs. Kaste is a fire lookout, practitioner of a craft that this summer
is celebrating its 100th anniversary, having been invented in Bertha
Hill, Idaho, when a timber camp cook was ordered to sit in a hilltop
tree and look for smoke. Until recently, Mrs. Kaste's lonely calling had
been steadily passing into history.

Federal and state forestry agencies, seduced by the mobility of
fire-spotting aircraft and the cost-effectiveness of satellites and
electronic sensors, stopped staffing most of the more than 8,200
lookouts scattered across the United States. Some especially scenic
lookouts were rented to tourists, but many others were abandoned,
vandalized or burned down.

The decades-old demise of the fire lookout, however, has been put on
hold. As suburban-style homes are built ever deeper into the forests,
fire experts are beginning to realize that people like Mrs. Kaste, in
her Flagstaff Lookout, can be the cheapest and most reliable way to
prevent exurbanites from burning up the woods, their houses and
themselves.

Many fire lookout stations go into operation across the country this
Memorial Day weekend.

"We have been getting back to using some lookouts," said Buck Latapie,
assistant director for fire and aviation management at United States
Forest Service headquarters in Washington. "In parts of the country
where there is an increasing amount of human-caused fires, fire towers
are better than regularly scheduled aerial surveillance."

The Forest Service has no national numbers on how many federal and state
lookouts have been refurbished and restaffed. But it says the trend,
with some exceptions, is most pronounced in regions where increasing
numbers of people are living in and around large forests, including the
Far West, the Northeast and some Rocky Mountain states.

Oregon appears to have had the sharpest reversal of fortune. After
nearly 40 years of decline, the number of staffed fire lookouts in the
state increased about 10 percent in the past decade, to more than 100,
said Ray Kresek, author of "Fire Lookouts of the Northwest," a book that
chronicles the fate of all 3,133 lookouts in the region.

Thanks to increased federal spending on fire prevention in Oregon, the
number of fire lookouts on Forest Service land increased nearly 30
percent in the past year, to 66 from 51, a Forest Service spokesman in
Portland said.

"There are so many people moving from the cities to rural wooded areas
in Oregon," Mr. Kresek said. "Both the Forest Service and the state
realized that fire detection by aircraft wasn't really cutting it. The
reports were not early enough and they resulted in larger fires."

The urbanizing forests of Southern California are typical of the long
fall and recent rise of the fire lookout. There, as in many of the
reborn lookouts across the country, the work is done by volunteers. Many
of them spend long days in towers where they can see their own
neighborhoods.

"I got started in a tower where I could see my cabin," said George
Morey, 63, who installs windows and screens in new houses. "I think we
have proven that we can do a better job of protecting our home than
satellites or airplanes."

Mr. Morey volunteered in the San Bernardino National Forest. Located
about 60 miles east of Los Angeles, it is one of the country's most
heavily populated national forests. Because of the hot summer winds that
rake across a ridge of mountains, the forest is also a major fire risk.

Starting this weekend and running until the first snows of late fall,
that risk will be monitored by 260 volunteers who staff seven lookouts
inside the forest. The volunteer program has also spread to two lookouts
in the nearby Angeles National Forest.

For many years, human eyes were not all that useful in Southern
California lookout towers. They could not distinguish forest-fire smoke
from the pall of smog that drifted west from Los Angeles. In the past
decade, though, stricter rules on automobile emissions have
significantly cleared the air.

"Now that we can see better from the towers, we can do a much better job
of spotting fires," said Angie Moebius, a coordinator for the San
Bernardino National Forest Association, a nonprofit group that manages
the fire lookouts.

The lookout program began in the early 1990's, she said, as a way of
restoring abandoned towers and teaching Californians to appreciate the
ecology of the forest. As the years went by, however, lookouts often
spotted fires before air surveillance planes. "Now we are up in the
towers primarily for fire detection," Ms. Moebius said.

In parts of the Northeast, staffed towers are making a comeback, as
forests and suburbs meet.

"We have the most problems with fire in what we call the wild land-urban
interface," said Bob Wolff, a fire warden in northern New Jersey for the
state Forest Fire Service. "People love having pine limbs brush up
against their house, which is a beautiful thing - until that forest
catches on fire."

New Jersey, where about 2,000 forest fires burn nearly 10,000 acres
every year, is one of a few states that never turned away from fire
lookouts. It has 21 towers, which afford lookouts a view of every major
forest in the entire state. They are staffed throughout the fire season
with full-time state employees. Because of drought in New Jersey over
the past year, Mr. Wolff said, the fire season extended throughout the
winter.

Leaving fire spotting primarily to aircraft has always been a bad idea,
said Mr. Kresek, who lives in Spokane, Wash. "There is no comparison
between a good lookout and an airplane," he said. "A good lookout will
see smoke at dawn, long before people who live next to a fire."

The comeback of fire towers, especially in Oregon and California, has
been gratifying, said Mr. Kresek, a retired firefighter. But he
describes himself as "extremely disappointed" in the State of Washington
for continuing to take lookouts out of service. "I expect Washington to
be putting lookouts back up once they get them all torn down," he said.

As this summer begins, the Washington State Department of Natural
Resources plans to have only one full-time staffed lookout in the state,
he said.

Located in the Colville Forest about seven miles south of the Canadian
border, it is where Gayle Kaste continues to do what she has been doing
for a quarter-century.

"I don't read books up here," she said, prowling the catwalk that
surrounds the glassed-in cabin of her 40-foot lookout. "I read
magazines. That way I can look around every 10 minutes."

Jim Updike works as a warden down in the forest that Mrs. Kaste guards
from her mountaintop perch. By spotting fires early and directing
firefighters to the precise location where they are burning, he said,
she certainly earned her keep. She makes about $1,700 a summer.

"We are really lucky to have her watching over us," he said.