Family and private forest owners collectively own more than 3.5 million acres of forestland across Oregon. With tracts of 10 to 40 acres of forestland, these owners live intermixed with the federal land and state parks. These forest owners, like many others in the West, are eager and motivated to help care for the land. In fact, landowners across the west place fire as a primary concern and 67 percent have witnessed a wildfire firsthand on their land or on neighboring land, according to a report from AFF.
Yet, relatively few have taken action. Much of this can be attributed to the high cost of forest management. With the loss of mills and markets for wood over the past 20 years, and the skyrocketing of private land values and property taxes, landowners and private forest owners to have less income to conduct action to reduce fire risk on their land. [That's why we are here to help.]
AFF, with the USFS, NRCS, ODF, OSU extension, OFRI, Wallowa Resources, and other local partners are working to help support family landowners in actively managing and improving this forested region in order to protect the water supply. Together the partners are connecting with private forest owners across rural Oregon through neighbor-to-neighbor efforts and direct outreach to help them get started in fire risk reduction and forest management. Attending workshops and meeting one-on-one with professionals, landowners are learning more about management practices, the resources, and cost-share assistance programs available to restore their land and reduce fire risk. Already these landowners are conducting practices to restore the forests – reducing fuel loads and more, so as to protect the water supply of the region for the future. Find out how landowner's like you, are doing their part in reducing the risk of Wildfire.
* This post content is provided by the American Forest Foundation. Click the link to access the original blog post written by Elizabeth Greener and Tom Fry.*