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Crews scramble to stabilize King Fire terrain


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By Peter Hecht, Sacramento Bee

Engineering and erosion control crews faced a time paradox Wednesday in a scorched Sierra Nevada region.

For weeks since the devastating King fire burned through 97,717 acres of timberland and watershed north of Pollock Pines, multiple agencies launched a long-term project to protect water supplies and wildlife habitat from destruction due to burned mountain terrain being unable to handle seasonal rains. Agencies including the U.S. Forest Service and the Sacramento Municipal Utility District have been conducting helicopter “helimulching” flights, dropping tons of rice straw to hold fragile hillsides and promote regrowth.

They hope to resume the flights as soon as dry weather returns.

But with a major storm system barreling down, crews Wednesday shifted to more immediate concerns by building earthen berms to help prevent roadways from washing out and to keep sediment from fouling the upper American River and nearby tributaries.

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Comments (2)
  1. Old Long Skiis says - Posted: December 11, 2014

    I’ve heard from two separate people that a “controlled burn” is raging along the twin peaks area off of Sawmill rd. Can anyone confirm?
    Supposedlly visible from the hi way. With these high winds it could get bad real quick. Hopefully it’s just a fools rumour. OLS

  2. Cheva Gabor, USFS Public Affairs says - Posted: December 11, 2014

    Old Long Skiis — it is indeed just a rumor. Our crews have been monitoring our prescribed fire locations and they under control. We are currently in low fire danger with heavy precipitation headed into the Lake Tahoe Basin.