Ham
Lake Fire, MN |
Lee
Frelich |
May
07, 2007 18:17 PDT |
ENTS:
I just survived an extremely exciting 4 day canoe trip in boreal
forests of
the Boundary Waters Wilderness around Seagull Lake, MN. I went
with a
writer and photographer from Backpacker Magazine to work on a
story about
global warming in boreal forests, and we did get that task done.
However,
it was the unexpected event that stole the show.
May 07, 2007
Around noon on Saturday we noticed a plume of smoke to the south
of Seagull
Lake, and with the continuation of last year's drought, dryness
of conifer
foliage during May due to cold ground inhibiting water uptake
and intense
sunlight evaporating water from the top of the trees, and
southeast winds
of >30 mph, it quickly bloomed into a major forest fire.
After visiting
the 2002 prescribed burn that turned Three Mile Island into
canyons
resembling Utah (by removing the vegetation so you can see the
rock
formations), where we saw a moose climbing the pink granite
hills, the
ancient cedars of the north shore of the island, we made a trip
across the
lake to a campsite on a peninsula we thought would provide a
good refuge
from the waves. Winds in excess of 30 mph blew for 72 hours,
making the
trip across the large lake rather dicey, since ice out was only
3 days
earlier and the water was 34 degrees. If you capsize in such
water at mid
lake, you die from hypothermia before any chance of reaching
shore. Waves
were hitting with only 2 inches to spare at the bow of the
canoe. I did
take one spill into the lake at the shore because I slipped
while entering
the canoe, but only when in up to the waist, and went numb in a
few
seconds. After a suitable period of recovery, we continued and
reached the
Seagull Palisades, where we were pinned in by waves for the next
two days.
By this time, the fire had become a roaring out of control
monster, and our
campsite was filled with smoke almost the whole time, from which
there was
no escape, since the winds would not let us go anywhere. Water
bombers were
active throughout the day, and forest Service monitoring planes
flew over
and confirmed out position--we were the only party in the
wilderness (who
else would go in three days after ice-out in high winds?). We
knew that the
lake and burns during 2002 and 2006 blocked the path of the fire
to our
location, so it would not reach us other than with the smoke.
However,
Sunday night, we noticed an orange glow in the east, which meant
the fire
had made its way around the east end of Seagull Lake, and could
possibly
move to our area. There was so much light that we could hike in
the forest
at Midnight without flashlights, even though we were 4 miles
from the
fires. A hike to the top of the palisades revealed flames
hundreds of feet
high and large orange balls of fire progressing rapidly
northward. This
morning the winds ended, and we finally made a run for the
wilderness exit.
As we approached the edge of the wilderness we saw that jack
pine, red
pine, white pine, black spruce and white cedar forests on many
islands and
the mainland were toasted to the blackness of charcoal. Is was
obvious
that Wilderness Canoe Base, our base station for research trips
into the
wilderness had burned. When we reached the parking lot, two men
from the
Forest Service were waiting for us with orders to see that my
party got
safely out of the wilderness to Gunflint Lodge, were a command
center has
been set up and many fire managers and reporters from several TV
and radio
stations were waiting to talk with me. The pilot of the plane
that checked
our position relative to the fire was also there to shake my
hand.
The entire north end of the Gunflint Trail is blackened,
although many
wilderness outfitters buildings survived due to the Firewise
campaign and
actions they had taken to protect their property over the last
several
years. Seagull outfitters and Voyageurs Canoe Outfitters, the
two
outfitters we use most often survived, although their trees were
burned.
Our cars were parked in their lot and were covered with ash and
thousands
of singed black spruce needles, but other wise undamaged even
though trees
burned 20 feet away. At this point the Ham Lake fire has burned
about
16,000 acres, and is thought to have started from an escaped
campfire. The
north end of the Gunflint Trail is closed until further notice.
Who ever
started the fire is big trouble...
Lee |
Fire Information
RE:
Ham Lake Fire |
Lee
E. Frelich |
May
08, 2007 15:51 PDT |
Bob:
I thought about my friends who own outfitting businesses that
were on fire,
worried about the people who might be worried about us, and
wondered how
long we'd be stuck there before the lake calmed down.
Lee
At 07:13 AM 5/8/2007, you wrote:
|
Lee,
OMG! Your wilderness experiences
are priceless, to say nothing of
terrifying. You've GOT to begin writing a book on your
experiences. We,
your admiring readers demand it. What were some of your
thoughts as you
stood looking at that distant wall of flames?
Bob
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Re:
Ham Lake Fire |
Lee
Frelich |
May
09, 2007 19:22 PDT |
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