Author: Sue Ahrendt

May the blessing of the rain be on you….

May the blessing of the rain be on you—
the soft sweet rain.
May it fall upon your spirit
The Celtic blessing kept ringing in my head yesterday morning as Denali and I ran the access road to Round Lake.   We were really happy to run through the rain.  It seems like such a miracle– it really is when you consider the energy and work behind all the water bombers dropping gallons and gallons of water on the Pagami Lake Fire in the other corner of the Boundary Waters.  Here we were running through the big giant perfect sprinkler system.

The fire hasn’t been growing much, if at all…

What happens next?
    High Cliffs Saturday afternoon
  1. They keep monitoring the big giant footprint down near Ely.  And the planes and helicopters look for spot fires.  On Saturday–before the rain–the fire was supposed to be more active.  It was beautiful and breezy–Rachel and I hiked to High Cliffs in search of smoke.  We couldn’t identify any. 

    Photo courtesy of Dennis Neitzke

    The aerial photo from late afternoon on Saturday shows a lot of black, but not a lot of activity (taken down by Polly Lake, if you know that area).  

  2. They have started to let the people evacuated in the Isabella area back into their homes.
  3. They’ll start opening up entry points tomorrow (Tuesday).  The entire Gunflint Trail will be open, with some restrictions.  They still do not want people paddling toward Alice Lake–It’s completely understandable why the folks in charge of public safety are so jumpy about that.  Last Monday was a mighty weird weather day. 
  4. Now will be the time for some people to try pin the blame on somebody.  Is that the natural thing to do to try to be in control?   We can all say in hindsight it was the wrong decision not to start fighting  fire on August 18th when the Pagami Creek Fire was little.  But I can’t say it was a bad decision.  I wasn’t sitting at that table, considering past fire behavior, calculating the odds, weighing policy against other factors, trying to predict the future based on a bunch of weather models.  I do know that the people at the table were qualified,  ones I’d probably still chose to make that decision again if it were up to me…….. ……..I also remember another flukey weather day 5 years ago when one guy was blamed for the Ham Lake fire.  While his campfire was his responsibility, you couldn’t imagine what the weather was like that day that fire took off.  Ironically, I’ll bet I’ve talked to 15 different people who stopped to put out unattended campfires in August–and that was just me. Was that really his fault?
  5. As we ran yesterday…..on this favorite little piece of road with a recovering forest…I was reminded about some other things that  happen next—

  • The birch seeds will get early dibs in there–traveling on the autumn winds.
  • The moose love young those birch saplings–hopefully some will enjoy them in the years to come.
  • The jack pine and spruce cones need fire to open–the cones will have scatted seeds on the rich black ground.

    Jack pine cones
  • These poplars–5 years old, over 10 feet tall
  • The poplar tree roots will have been stimulated by the fire..  They’re like wild men–sprouting after a fire like that.  Even fallen limbs that are unburned will start to sprout.
  • The raspberries
  • Berries go crazy….
  • The field–with pearly everlasting
  • Also the wildflowers–like the white pearly everlasting get some sun, and can thrive….I’m not a naturalist or a botanist..or a forester…but I think I’ve heard that there are seeds that are dormant waiting for a fire to clear the view.
  • I understand the animals like the contrast.  On this particular hill I’ve seen moose, bear, wolves, deer.  
  • Grandma White Pines
    Happy little guys
  • The more fire resistant white pines that weather the storm go on to be the seed sources for the whole area.
  • Grove of birches
  • Not everything burns in every fire–so the patches of growth may remain.
  • The old standing trees become habitat for some rare birds sometimes.  I don’t know how the black backed woodpeckers found these so quickly–but apparently the word gets out. 
  •  It’s a pleasure to watch the woods recover! 







It’s a beautiful day in the neighborhood

But a little chilly!   Some entry points around here reamin closed, but cabin and canoe guests are finding plenty of lovely places to paddle the Gunflint Trail today.

The cold weather is holding that Pagami Creek Fire steady on the west end.  Lots of reinforcements have arrived from all over the country to fight the fire down there, but we’re still waiting for the clouds to change—the greatest reinforcements will be the big soaking rains.  Until then, if you check out the map you can see the most current map of the fire. 

I’m really thankful that the people are still safe.  I’m remembering that fire is good–we need it in this fire-dependent ecosystem.  The woods will be fine, but that is enough for this year, thank you.   In the meantime….it sure is a lovely day.  (thanks again to Rachel Swenson for the photographs)

Pagami Creek Fire

Are we worried?  You bet.  But not so much about Tuscarora or our guests today.
The Pagami Creek Fire started by lightening on August 18th–down near Ely.
Yesterday was a big windy dry day, and the fire made a run.  Today is a little windy too but not nearly as dramatic, or alarming.

We know that the woods need to burn.  We love our BWCAW lakes and our blueberries- our new forests and our old ones–it’s such a mosaical experience these days.  But this fire feels out of hand, on all fronts.   Please pray for the safety of the fire fighters, and of those on the west end that are evacuating.   Our hearts go out to our friends on the edge of this thing—and we’re wishing them peace and calm until the rains will come.  They always do.

Today, the USFS closed all BWCAW entry points west of us—including Cross Bay, Brant, Missing Link.  We can set people up on the east side of the Gunflint Trail, but it is not a good day to start a canoe trip headed south and west.  Not until we get some rain.

Forecasts call for cold weather–frost advisories starting on Wednesday night.  We’d prefer cold and wet, to calm that fire right down. 

Detailed updated information available:  http://www.inciweb.org/incident/2534

Please call us if we can re-book your permit to the east side, or Quetico or if you would like to re-schedule your trip.  Thanks for your flexibility.

The Morning Fog Has LIfted

Our favorite Jerry Vandiver wrote this song as a tribute to his friend….Jerry shared the following email recently:

Meanwhile, a paddling friend of mine recently lost his 2 yr battle with lymphoma. He was 42. He had a couple of BW pics he took of the fog coming off a lake and I decided to write a tribute to him and couple the song with a slide show of his pictures. The song is called “The Morning Fog Has Lifted”

Monitoring Fires

When we issue permits this summer, we’ve been able to tell guests consistently “There are no fire restrictions, we’ve had enough rain.” And then I’d go on to rant and rave about leaving campfires cool-to-the-touch.

We’ve had smoke from Canada fires all summer long–and if you’ve been paying attention, they’ve had some biggies. If the wind direction is just right, Manitoba fires can make our eyes water, just a little bit.

And even though conditions aren’t supporting a wildfire around here—doesn’t mean that we humans haven’t started a few. It’s really easy to do, with so many people in the woods. When it is 40 degrees in the morning, the skies are cool, calm, a little cloudy the campfires die down and appear ‘out.’ Then, in the afternoons, when it reaches 80 degrees and the wind picks up, any embers take off again, and passing paddlers see a fire in a grate—with no one attending it.

Most often, good Samaritan paddlers douse these unattended fires, and then return with the stories. But occasionally—more often than we’d like to think, an unattended fire spreads. This last month, fires have been suppressed on Kekakabic, Loon Lake, Brule Lake, Gaskin… The cause isn’t always campfires, sometimes it’s lightening, sometimes the experts can’t or won’t identify the origin. Fire cleans up the ground fuels, it’s supposed to happen—-just not where you and I want to camp next week, I guess.

Earlier in August, we were sent information and a photo of one of the fires on Kekekabic. I have a soft spot for that lake, my ears perk upwhen I hear about Kekakabic—where the USFS completed a prescribed burn last fall.

In January at a ski meet, I was trying to give one of those fire managers in the Ely area a hard time for torching MY FAVORITE lake. He smiled, but would have none of it. When I saw photos of this summer’s fire—I noticed where the smoke and embers might be blowing—I could see the prescribed burn footprint—right in the path of the fire. And I realized—all that mess of blowdown in there, ready to go up like kindling—already burned in a controlled way. I thought AHA! Somebody ought to be smug about this! It’s perfect. Can you see from the photo—that the trees along the shoreline (across from this particular spot), were not burned. Which means, from the paddlers on the lake, the shoreline might still appear pristine.. And behind it—the ground fuels are all cleaned up. We didn’t hear any news of the Great Kekakabic Wild Fire–because there wasn’t one.

Near Ely right now, Pagami Creek Fire: less than 200 acres are burning slowly. According to a recent press release:

Ely, MN… Lightning caused the Pagami Creek Fire that was detected August 18, 2011 approximately 14 miles east of Ely in the Pagami Creek area. The fire is located within the borders of the Boundary Water Canoe Area Wilderness (BWCAW) between the South Kawishiwi River, Clearwater Lake and Lake One. This high use area within the BWCAW is a favorite for visitors recreating in northern Minnesota.

Friday, August 26, 2011 a combination of low relative humidity and higher winds caused an increase in size from approximately half an acre to 130 acres. The rapid increase in fire size lead the Superior National Forest to request an Interagency Incident Management Team (IMT) to assist in managing the fire. The role of the Incident Management Team is to “monitor, confine and contain” the Pagami Creek Fire according to Incident Commander Greg Peterson.

The current moderate fire behavior is allowing the Pagami Creek fire to provide several benefits. Fire creates natural fuel breaks by reducing heavy fuel loads. It also helps to preserve the health of the ecosystem of northern MN.

The Pagami Creek fire will be carefully monitored to ensure that it does not become a threat to the safety of the public or firefighters. If there are areas that require containment, crews will use more aggressive firefighting tactics. Hand tools and saws may be used to build containment lines. Aircraft may be used to drop water on the fire. Fire may be used to fight fire by “burning out” or removing fuels from ahead of the fire.

There are no closures in place at this time. Visitors are asked to avoid the Pagami Creek area and immediate fire area. Incident Commander Greg Peterson stressed, “We will be working with the Superior National Forest to develop short term and long term planning to allow visitors to safely enjoy the BWCAW.”

Additional fire information is available at www.inciweb.org/incident/2534 or by calling 218-365-3177.

I’ve seen the competence of the teams they bring in, and while they can protect people and property on the edges of the fire, no amount of human competence can control the conditions that fan a stray spark into a wild fire, or hold a .5 acre fire around a fire grate to wait patiently for some rangers to paddle out and monitor it.

The truth is, the weather makes the rules. Humidity and wind are out of the hands of the management teams. The woods are wild, the fires are necessary. I keep reminding myself. The woods are wild, the fires are necessary………