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douglas9

(4,476 posts)
Wed Oct 7, 2020, 05:01 AM Oct 2020

Alarmed by Scope of Wildfires, Officials Turn to Native Americans for Help

LOS ANGELES — When Belinda Brown was a child, she would rise early in the morning every spring and fall to help her father and grandfather light the fields of the XL Ranch Indian reservation outside of Alturas, Calif. She would take a metal rake to the grasses and watch as flames spread.

“Fire was absolutely a part of what we did all the time,” she said. “It wasn’t a fearful thing.”

Long before California was California, Native Americans used fire to keep the lands where they lived healthy. That meant intentionally burning excess vegetation at regular intervals, during times of the year when the weather would keep blazes smaller and cooler than the destructive wildfires burning today.

The work requires a deep understanding of how winds would spread flames down a particular hillside or when lighting a fire in a forest would foster the growth of certain plants, and that knowledge has been passed down through ceremony and practice. But until recently, it has been mostly dismissed as unscientific.

Now, as more Americans are being forced to confront the realities of climate change, firefighting experts and policymakers are increasingly turning to fundamental ecological principles that have long guided Indigenous communities.

https://www.nytimes.com/2020/10/07/us/native-american-burning-practices-california.html


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Alarmed by Scope of Wildfires, Officials Turn to Native Americans for Help (Original Post) douglas9 Oct 2020 OP
An elderly member of the local tribe used to burn on her property yearly CountAllVotes Oct 2020 #1

CountAllVotes

(21,076 posts)
1. An elderly member of the local tribe used to burn on her property yearly
Wed Oct 7, 2020, 05:49 AM
Oct 2020

She hired my husband to do it for $7/hr. It was a dangerous job that took a few days to complete.

The property lies on the ocean bluffs!

It was common at one time; not so common today.

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