Author Topic: Agreement reached on pine needle removal at Tahoe  (Read 9398 times)

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Offline Wrightwood

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Agreement reached on pine needle removal at Tahoe
« on: Jun 23, 08, 03:06:14 PM »
The Tahoe Regional Planning Agency and the Lake Tahoe Basin fire chiefs have reached agreement on whether pine needles can be used for erosion control - the final point of a letter sent from the chiefs to the agency regarding defensible space.

The letter included nine points where the TRPA could amend its best management practices to better fit with defensible space.

It was generated by the seven basin fire chiefs for the Bi-State Blue Ribbon Commission after the Angora fire last July.

The TRPA has already agreed to eight of the September 2007 letter's points and have finally reached agreement on the letter's No. 4 point, which is concerned with ground coverage.

The sticking point of coverage centered around pine needles.

The needles offer a valuable erosion-control tool in the fall by protecting soil from runoff. Conversely, dry needles present a fire hazard.

The TRPA and basin chiefs have agreed on an alternative which both say is fire-safe and addresses erosion control.

"Basically the new TRPA best management practice will be to have residents remove pine needles once in the spring. This will get that dead vegetation up off of the ground for fire season," said Martin Goldberg, a forestry supervisor with the Lake Valley Fire Protection District in South Lake Tahoe. He said the new practice is applicable to the 5 to 30 foot area around a home.

TRPA spokesman Dennis Oliver said the final point is expected to be approved at the next Bi-State Commission meeting on March 6.

Goldberg is a member of the defensible space and best management practices working group. The group was charged with deciding what to do about the coverage point of the nine-point letter.

"This was the last sticking point in the letter; we're glad we got past it," Oliver said.

Oliver said most of the letter's points required only minor adjustments from TRPA's best management practices. TRPA approved eight of the points last October.

"Most of the points were only minor clarifications so people would not be confused about possibly violating our BMP's," he said.

http://www.nevadaappeal.com/article/20080228/NEWS-HTML/178714181/-1/rss01
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Offline TimG

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Re: Agreement reached on pine needle removal at Tahoe
« Reply #1 on: Oct 14, 11, 03:45:17 PM »
So is this what we're supposed to do with pine needles?  My yard's full of them and I was about to rake them up so they wouldn't sit under the snow all winter (that's what I'm used to doing with leaves, etc, on the east coast).  I saw that there were pine needle drop-offs in the spring, but no other time, so this all adds up.  Am I supposed to leave them till April?

Offline ChrisLynnet

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Re: Agreement reached on pine needle removal at Tahoe
« Reply #2 on: Oct 14, 11, 04:36:09 PM »
I don't know if it's good, bad or indifferent but I leave them in the fall. I always figured they mulched the ground underneath the snow. It's the way the forest naturally does it so there you go.

I agree with raking them in the spring because of fire danger.

Offline TimG

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Re: Agreement reached on pine needle removal at Tahoe
« Reply #3 on: Oct 15, 11, 02:43:21 PM »
Thanks, Chris, that sounds like a plan -- and convenient because I don't have to do do anything for another six months!

Offline ChrisLynnet

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Re: Agreement reached on pine needle removal at Tahoe
« Reply #4 on: Oct 15, 11, 03:33:15 PM »
Exactly!  ;)