Battling the Pine Beetle In Summit County
VAIL — As the
color red has grown in the forest, so have Saundra Spaeh’s
worries.
Her home, near West Vail, is just two doors down from the
forest, where as much as 90 percent of lodgepole pines are
dead or dying. The mountain pine beetle epidemic has hit her
neighborhood hard.
Whether it’s a lightning strike or a barbecue sparking a
blaze, Spaeh says she understands the risk of a destructive
forest fire.
So she’s grateful that town, county and
the U.S. Forest Service are cooperating to create a layer of
“defensible space” — a 200-to-300-foot barrier — that aims
to stop the spread of a fire, either from the forest into
the neighborhood or vice versa.
“This is a really good thing,” Spaeh said.
Trees are being removed on almost 200 acres of land around
Vail. Much of that work will happen this fall, and workers
are already clearing a landing spot for a helicopter, which
will haul out felled trees.
Above Intermountain and Matterhorn in West Vail, crews will
cut about 8,000 trees, starting in the next couple of weeks.
Downed trees will be taken away by
helicopter, likely in the last week of September or the
first week of October. The helicopter is less harmful to the
hillside than trucks.
Experts talk about the dying trees as fuel that’s just
waiting to burn.
“From the impact from the pine beetle, eventually there’s
going to be a lot of fuel building up there,” said Phil
Bowden of the Forest Service. “You want to have space
between where that fuel will be building up and the homes so
you can defend homes.”
The “defensible space” also creates a staging area where
firefighters can set up when they have to fight a blaze,
Bowden said.
The red needles around West Vail are very flammable, said
Eric Lovgren, who is supervising a portion of the work for
Eagle County.
“Anybody who’s been around a campfire and thrown some pine
needles on it knows they can be volatile,” Lovgren said.
And when the trees fall, that puts a lot of flammable stuff
on the ground, too, Lovgren said.
While the pine-beetle epidemic is an
environmental worry in Vail, some of the felled trees will
go toward a “green” cause: biomass energy.
The county is selling the logs to Confluence Energy, which
has built a wood-pellet mill in Kremmling. The pellets are
used in special furnaces that heat homes while emitting
relatively little pollution.
The county will provide 5,000 tons of biomass to Confluence
Energy this year, and 1,000 tons per year for the next five
years, Lovgren said.
Work will go beyond the area above the Intermountain and
Matterhorn neighborhoods. This year, work in Vail will also
happen:
• Near the North Trail adjacent to Davos Trail.
• Along the north side of Interstate 70 between the Son of
Middle Creek Trail and North Trail.
• Along the North Trail that begins in the Red Sandstone
neighborhood.
• Near Bighorn Creek.
Workers will also likely be burning some brush piles above
West Vail this fall.
The work is part of the Vail Valley Forest Health Project, a
multi-year plan that stretches from Vail to Edwards. Work is
supposed to continue until 2010.
Last summer, the town worked with the Forest Service to cut
2,100 trees on 16 acres above Westhaven Drive near Donovan
Park.
Vail has hired a six-man “hand crew” this year to cut trees
on land owned by the town. The crew also will advise
homeowners on how to cut trees on their land.
The town of Vail is slated to commit $2 million to the
forest health project from 2004 through 2010.
Staff Writer Edward Stoner can be reached at 748-2929 or
estoner@vaildaily.com.
| Who’s paying? | |
|

Vail creating barrier against fire
SummitPineBeetle.org is a service of
Our Future Summit
330 Fiedler Street, Suite 206A
Dillon Colorado 80435
970-468-7875