Friday, 18 July 2025

 

A walk in the woods

Lost hats, toys, gloves, dog leads and so forth are left on highly visible posts.
The notice is a reminder that fire can spread very rapidly. With summer school holidays beginning in the next couple of days, the danger of uncontrolled fire increases as inexperienced teenagers set fires to cook sausages and boil water in warm evenings. They extinguish the flames and think that is sufficient, but the ground beneath is hot and can reignite if it has not been thoroughly soaked.

A few years ago we came across a smouldering fire and had to call the fire brigade. There was no way for the fire engine to get into the woods so they had to bring a stirrup pump to douse it. 

Decades of fallen leaves make a thick mulch, in which fire can smoulder and spread.

It's usually refreshing to be among the trees in the woods, but it's been very dry here and the air smelt odd. The closest I could identify it as was unwashed socks! 

It's just started raining and already the air smells fresher. Unfortunately, we need it to rain steadily for hours, and that doesn't seem to be happening.


Fallen sweet chestnut regenerating





7 comments:

  1. Those nearby woods look delightful. Is that Barry with the stick?

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  2. The Brother and I were forbidden to play in the woods. Ma was convinced there were hoboes. In all of the times I played in the woods, I never once saw a hobo or evidence of hoboes. (Ma worked so what you mama don't know, your mama don't mind)

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  3. The decades of mulch reminds me a little of those Zombie Fires in Canada. They go underground in the winter only to return in the spring and summer. The science of wild fire is interesting to me since I live in a fireprone area. I’ve learned a lot from the fires we’ve had that I never knew when I lived in the city.

    Your woods look so nice. I enjoy forests and mountains. My happy place!

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  4. Beautiful photos Janice. I know what it is like with long hot dry summers. We had that last year & a fire ban from December til May. I burn my own garden rubbish here on our property & by the time I was allowed to burn again the heap was above my head!

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  5. When we moved here 40 years ago everyone burned their garden rubbish on bonfires at the back of the properties on waste ground along the stream. Then we found a major gas main ran along the banks just near our string of bonfires...

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  6. The fire risk is exacerbated if it gets into old roots (those fallen trees) and can smoulder underground for ages. When I worked in the NZ Forest Service we used to use infra-red cameras (in helicopter) to identify hot spots that weren't obvious to people putting out fires on the ground. Where we were working seasonal winds could uncover them and set off fires again months after we thought we had extinguished them

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  7. I love the woods, even as things die they create life, I hope you get the rain you craves, we are in to a soak tomorrow and Sunday.

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