Protect Pasture from Wildfire
CORPUS CHRISTI – A Texas Cooperative
Extension range expert said pastures need protection from wildfire.
Dr. Wayne Hanselka, Extension range specialist here, said all that
is needed to touch off a fire when conditions are dry is an ignition
source – a cigarette or a spark from a welder, power lines
or a catalytic converter.
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Over the years, land managers have tended to neglect protective measures
on the land," Hanselka said. "Precautionary measures, such
as fire guards, particularly in more fire-prone areas, aren't as
common as they should be. However, it's never too late to install
measures designed to protect pastures and facilities from this very
real threat."
The most common protection against wildfire is fire guards around
and through pastures, he said. The guards form a break that keeps
fuel from a fire. A fire guard can help keep fire in or out of a
pasture, or keep it contained within smaller blocks of land. The
fire lines need to be wide enough to slow the fire and keep it contained,
he added.
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Fire guards may take several forms and several types may be used
together," Hanselka said. "The more permanent types are
done mechanically, often with a disc, a blade or a plow. Grasses
are removed or turned under the soil so that bare soil is exposed.
Any grasses occurring on the line could form a ‘bridge' that
allows fire to creep across the line. These fire guards need to be
at least three times as wide as the adjacent vegetation is tall (3
ft. high grasses = 9-10 feet or more of fire guard). A flame front
should approach the guard, lay down over it, and not touch the far
side of the guard."
Temporary guards can be constructed by mowing excess fuel, he said.
The remaining stubble will still burn, but not with the intensity
or rate of spread supported by higher fuel loads. A strip is mowed
around a pasture with a disced or bladed line next to it. Another
strip is mowed to eliminate tall grasses from the plowed strip.
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Another combination is to use two lines – mechanical, wet lines
using water, and/or chemical lines (a super phosphate slurry) – at
an appropriate distance apart," he said. "The space in
between is then burned out. This effectively removes any fuel for
a distance away from the perimeter of the pasture. It is effective
for season-long protection. Of course, the burning of these ‘blacklines'
should be done when conditions allow them to be safely burned. Widths
vary with the kind and amount of fuel present. Black lines should
be at least 100 feet wide in grasslands with oak or mesquite brush.
In volatile brush such as cedars, the black line probably should
be at least 500 feet wide."
Fire guards provide an added bonus, Hanselka said, by doubling as
food plots for wildlife or forage for livestock. Disced fire guards
can be fertilized and planted to cool-season annual grasses and forbs,
he added. The green vegetation will not burn and provides food for
a variety of wildlife species.
Many fire guard options are available, so each landowner must decide
on the type and design that best fits his situation, Hanselka said.
Information on protecting property from wildfire is available from
Extension agents and specialists.
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When drought conditions worsen, protect rangeland pastures and facilities
before it's too late," Hanselka said.