Officials: Smoke from controlled burns will be visible from various locations in Grand Canyon

In this file photo, slash piles are burned in a prescribed fire near Duck Creek Village, Dixie National Forest, Utah, date not specified | Photo courtesy of the U.S. Forest Service, St. George News

GRAND CANYON, Ariz. — Grand Canyon National Park fire managers said on Tuesday that they anticipate initiating prescribed pile burning this week as weather and fuel moisture conditions allow and that smoke will be visible from many parts of the park.

According to a press release from park officials, as part of the South Rim Piles Project, they will burn 3,500 piles of woody debris east and west of South Entrance Road and south of Highway 64 East (Desert View Drive).

These 5-foot piles are comprised of slash left after mechanical thinning or cutting of trees within the 150-acre project area and are being burned as part of a key objective of the project, which is to reduce the fuel load.

Smoke from the South Rim Piles Project will be most visible during ignition operations and will likely gradually diminish after ignitions are completed. Smoke impacts to state Route 64 should be minimal, but drivers are advised to move along the highway slowly with their lights on, avoid stopping in areas where fire personnel are working and follow directions of signs and personnel. There are no road closures anticipated at this time.

Smoke will also be visible from various locations on the North and South rims, including Grand Canyon Village. Fire managers are working with the Arizona Department of Environmental Quality-Smoke Management Division to reduce and mitigate potential smoke impacts.

Prescribed fires play an important role in decreasing risks to life, resources and property, the press release stated. Fire managers carefully plan prescribed fires, initiating them only under environmental conditions that are favorable to firefighter and visitor safety and for achieving the desired objectives.

Prescribed fire objectives include reducing accumulations of hazard fuels, maintaining the natural role of fire in a fire-adapted ecosystem and protection of sensitive natural and cultural resources.

Information about the South Rim Piles Project can be found on Twitter @GrandCanyonNPS, Inciweb, or by calling 928-638-7819 for recorded fire information. For additional information about wildland fire at Grand Canyon National Park, click here.

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Twitter: @STGnews

 

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