Language Selection

Get healthy now with MedBeds!
Click here to book your session

Protect your whole family with Orgo-Life® Quantum MedBed Energy Technology® devices.

Advertising by Adpathway

         

 Advertising by Adpathway

Effort to protect giant sequoias shows progress after devastating Calif. wildfires

1 month ago 14

PROTECT YOUR DNA WITH QUANTUM TECHNOLOGY

Orgo-Life the new way to the future

  Advertising by Adpathway

Crews have thinned forests, conducted burns and planted thousands of seedlings to reduce fire risk after fires killed nearly 20% of the world’s giant sequoias

Bill FR1 EMS1 news images - 2026-04-29T134549.312.jpg

Crews responded to a vegetation fire on April 10, near Boulder Gulch on the Sequoia National Forest’s Kern River Ranger District, marking the first interagency wildfire incident of the 2026 season.

U.S. Forest Service - Sequoia National Forest/Facebook

By Paul Rogers
The Buffalo News

PORTERVILLE, Calif. — Five years ago, a tragic and depressing environmental story unfolded when thousands of giant sequoia trees, an iconic California species that tower 300 feet high and can live for 3,000 years, were killed during multiple large wildfires that roared across the southern Sierra Nevada.

The fires in 2020 and 2021 at Sequoia National Park, Sequoia National Forest and other areas burned with unprecedented intensity, killing nearly 20% of the world’s giant sequoias and exposing the growing vulnerability of the most massive trees on earth.

| MORE: Who should be trusted behind the wheel of a fire apparatus?

“It was heartbreaking,” said Kevin Conway, state forests program manager for CAL FIRE, the state’s primary firefighting agency. “You can’t help but ask, what could I have done? What should I have done? Could I have prevented this?”

After the fires, stunned scientists, park managers and environmental groups formed a partnership to reduce the chances of similar catastrophic outcomes in the years ahead. Now, with another summer fire season looming, they say they are making encouraging progress.

Since their efforts began in 2022, the partnership has thinned the overgrown brush and small trees that provide fuel for fires to burn hotter in 44 of the 94 giant sequoia groves in California.

Crews also conducted controlled burns and planted more than 682,000 sequoia seedlings in areas that burned severely in wildfires of 2020 and 2021. Altogether, their work has reduced fire danger on 23,251 acres over the past four years, according to a new report issued earlier this month.

“It’s a race against time,” said Steve Mietz, the former superintendent of Redwood National Park who recently became president of Save the Redwoods League, an environmental group based in San Francisco. “It’s not a matter of if, but when we will have more fires. We have the answers. We know what to do. It’s not hopeless.”

The partnership, called the Giant Sequoia Lands Coalition, has eight primary members that own land between Tahoe National Forest and Bakersfield, where the 94 groves of massive and ancient sequoias are located. They are: CAL FIRE, California State Parks, the National Park Service, Tulare County, the Tule River Indian Tribe of California, UC Berkeley, the U.S. Forest Service, and the federal Bureau of Land Management.

Another nine organizations are also included, providing scientific research, funding and support. They are American Forests, the Ancient Forest Society, the Giant Sequoia National Monument Association, Save the Redwoods League, the Sequoia Parks Conservancy, Southern Sierra Conservancy, Stanislaus National Forest, the US Geological Survey, and the Yosemite Conservancy.

A cousin of the coast redwood, which is the world’s tallest tree, giant sequoias are the largest living tree by volume on Earth. Decimated by logging in the 1800s and early 1900s, nearly all of the remaining groves are preserved on public land within Yosemite National Park, Sequoia-Kings Canyon National Park, Calaveras Big Trees State Park and Sequoia National Forest.

The trees evolved with fire, said Kristen Shive, a fuels and forest specialist with the University of California Cooperative Extension Program at UC Berkeley. Giant Sequoia cones have resin that needs fire to melt it to release seeds.

Their spongy, reddish bark can grow to 2 feet thick. It acts like insulation, protecting the tree’s inner living tissue from heat.

Fires from lightning and those set by Indian tribes typically burned through giant sequoia groves every 10 to 20 years before the Gold Rush of the 1850s. But starting about 100 years ago, efforts to fight wildfires began to make them more vulnerable to fire.

When fire crews put out fires, it allowed small trees, brush and dead wood to build up to unnaturally dense levels, Shive noted. Now, when wildfire flames enter the groves, they burn hotter and more intensely than ever before, with the potential to kill the ancient trees entirely.

“Those fires in 2020 and 2021 were a game changer,” she said. “We had thousands of acres of high-severity fire. It was a shocking change and a hard one. We were going out to do surveys and seeing trees that had lived for millennia and had died due mostly to human mismanagement. It was a really hard pill to swallow.”

Another added stress is climate change. Hotter temperatures dry out soils and vegetation, making fire more severe. The drought of 2012-2016 and 2020-2022 killed millions of other trees in the Sierra, providing more fuel for fires.

The solution, Shive and Conway said, is removing many of the overgrown smaller trees that surround the giant sequoias in dense thickets, like white fir, red fir and incense cedar. Large sugar pines and ponderosa pines that died during droughts are also removed with chainsaws.

Much of the debris is piled and burned out of fire season. Some of the larger wood on private land or Cal Fire -owned demonstration forests can be sold to lumber companies to offset the costs of thinning. After thinning, areas can be treated with controlled burns, using techniques native tribes used for centuries, Conway said. Removing the extra material not only causes wildfires to burn less intensely and less hot, but it also allows more sunlight into the forest so giant sequoia seedlings have a chance to grow, he added.

“These forests aren’t in their natural condition,” Conway said. “We are trying to get them back to their natural condition so they are resistant to drought, fire and disease. It is a more open, thinner stand of trees.”

The actor’s hands-on FDNY challenge raises hundreds of thousands to help fire departments struggling to afford equipment and training

A 1998 bushfire in Australia led to a day honoring firefighter sacrifice and service worldwide

Texas Health Fort Worth’s simulation unit gives EMS and fire crews hands-on emergency training closer to home

Strong winds carried flames and smoke across Belleville and parts of Essex County, prompting a state of emergency and air quality warnings

© 2026 The Buffalo News (Buffalo, N.Y.).
Visit www.buffalonews.com.
Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

Each year, the NFFF carries out a responsibility entrusted to it by Congress: honoring America’s fallen firefighters and standing alongside the families they leave behind. In 2026, that mission is at risk.

Read Entire Article

         

        

Start the new Vibrations with a Medbed Franchise today!  

Protect your whole family with Quantum Orgo-Life® devices

  Advertising by Adpathway