November-December 2009

After the Fire

Emergency hydroseeding and hydromulching measures can stop erosion.

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Photo: Apex Curb and Turf

By Steve Goldberg

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Hydromulching is a common approach to post-fire erosion control. Water, wood fiber mulch, and often a tackifier are combined in a slurry and applied to minimize soil movement. If seeds (and possibly fertilizer) are added to the mix, it is referred to as hydroseeding.

Finn Corp. explains that hydroseeding is most commonly used for erosion control, to retain moisture, and to protect against damage from wind and rain. The elements that make up the hydroseeding slurry bind with the ground surface, allowing it to gradually revegetate and provide natural erosion control.

This hydroseeding or hydromulching mixture is typically applied via a hydroseeding machine. The Finn line of HydroSeeders, for example, runs the gamut from a small T-30, with a 335-gallon-capacity tank, up to the T-400, which can hold up to 3,600 gallons of slurry. Bowie Industries also produces hydroseeding units, and a number of other manufacturers offer similar equipment.

The Gap Fire
Late in the afternoon on July 1, 2008, a group of five teenagers started a fire in the hills above Goleta, CA, in Santa Barbara County. They claimed that they thought the fire had been extinguished before they left the area.

Photo: Apex Curb and Turf
At a staging area, workers arrange bales of straw mulch.

Unfortunately, it continued to smolder as the youngsters left. The fire eventually spread to more than 9,400 acres, and took nearly a month before it was brought under control. Hundreds of residents left their homes and four outbuildings were destroyed, but no homes were lost nor were any major injuries reported.

Forty-eight percent of the burned acreage in what came to be known as the Gap Fire was on National Forest property, and as a result, the Forest Service assembled a Burned Area Emergency Response (BAER) team to study the likely aftermath of the fire and to suggest treatment solutions.

This Gap BAER team determined that 76% of the burned area sustained “moderate or high burn severity” and concluded “Because the Gap Fire removed nearly all of the vegetative cover over the majority of the burned area, especially on steep slopes, there is high to very high potential for increased water runoff leading to flooding and debris flows. Runoff and sediment yield is expected to increase substantially during the first three years after the fire. Native vegetation will resprout, but it will take about five years for an effective vegetative cover to be reestablished.”

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The report noted that property “at risk within or below the Gap Fire burned area includes homes and businesses, power lines, water pipelines, a water treatment plant, reservoirs, roads, bridges, orchards, the Santa Barbara Airport, railroad tracks, and Highway 101.”

Due to the very steep slopes and lack of access roads on Forest Service property, the Gap BAER team decided that aerial hydromulching offered the best opportunity to replace lost vegetative cover. The Forest Service specified an all-organic hydromulch mix of paper and wood fiber, water, and guar as a tackifier. Green dye was added to the hydromulch to help pilots easily identify which areas had already been treated. This mixture was selected for its safety and for its ability to bind to the soil while allowing native plants to sprout. Next Page >

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