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Joined: Feb 2001
Posts: 50,627
Campfire Kahuna
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Campfire Kahuna
Joined: Feb 2001
Posts: 50,627
Why don't they just put up some bonds for regular maintenance? Hard to believe how pathetic it has gotten.

Oh yeah, the Byers Lake Campground is also the site of the Veterans' Memorial.

https://www.adn.com/alaska-news/mat...eet&utm_campaign=Morning+News+Update

Spruce bark beetle damage shuts down 2 popular Alaska campgrounds
pencil Author: Dan Joling, Associated Press clock Updated: 1 day ago calendar Published 1 day ago
South Rolly Lake Campground, in the Nancy Lake State Recreation Area, is one of two state campgrounds that will be closed this summer due to the threat of beetle-killed spruce trees falling. Photographed Wednesday, April 10, 2019. (Loren Holmes / ADN) Buy This Photo
South Rolly Lake Campground, in the Nancy Lake State Recreation Area, is one of two state campgrounds that will be closed this summer due to the threat of beetle-killed spruce trees falling. Photographed Wednesday, April 10, 2019. (Loren Holmes / ADN)

The threat of falling trees brought on by insects and exacerbated by climate warming will close two Alaska state campgrounds this summer.

Campers could be hurt by toppling trees killed by spruce bark beetles, whose infestations are accelerated by mild winters and hot summers, according to the Alaska Division of Parks and Outdoor Recreation.

"We have been experiencing a number of rotten trees falling over in the campgrounds this season, and while the timing is unfortunate, we need to take action now to reduce this hazard and help make our parks safer," Ricky Gease, state parks director, said in the announcement.

The campgrounds, with more than 100 campsites, are south of Denali National Park and Preserve. Byers Lake Campground is in Denali State Park, and the South Rolly Lake Campground is in the Nancy Lake State Recreation Area.

The state plans to hire contractors to cut down and remove rotten trees. However, to avoid spreading beetles, the state plans to do the work in cold weather. That means campground closures likely will last through summer and could extend into next year, the parks division said.

Spruce bark beetles caused major damage in Alaska forests late last century, one of the earliest signs scientists cited as evidence of climate change in the country’s largest state because milder winters allowed the insects to flourish.

Aerial surveys through 2006 found that spruce bark beetles had killed mature white spruce trees on 6,875 square miles. Much of the damage occurred on the Kenai Peninsula south of Anchorage.

[Spruce bark beetles are back with a vengeance. Here’s how to defend your trees.]

[Beetle damage skyrockets to nearly a million acres in Southcentral Alaska]

Glenn Juday, professor emeritus of forest ecology at the University of Alaska Fairbanks, said in an email that bark beetles always have been present in Alaska.

"With a warmer climate, environmental conditions allow more frequent, larger, and much more extreme swings to the outbreak mode in which most controls on beetle population expansion are overcome," he said.


A major outbreak requires extensive stands of mature trees and something that triggers stress in the trees, such as heavy snow or high wind. Drought also stresses trees.

Warm summers allow spruce bark beetles to develop in one year instead of two or mature enough to withstand winter cold without dying. During a large-scale outbreak, Juday said, repeated attacks can weaken even vigorous trees, making them vulnerable to dying.

Following outbreaks in the late 20th century, Alaska has had years of forest regrowth and buildup of a greater percentage of trees at a vulnerable age.

“We had a couple of cold winters that knocked the beetle population down, but strings of back to back mild winters are common now,” he said. “Average summer temperatures are warmer, summers are longer now, and extreme summer warmth is more common, so the rapid beetle development mode and tree stress are common now, too.”


Mark Begich, Joaquin Jackson, and Heller resistance... Three huge reasons to worry about the NRA.
GB1

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Campfire Kahuna
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Campfire Kahuna
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Mark Begich, Joaquin Jackson, and Heller resistance... Three huge reasons to worry about the NRA.
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Campfire Ranger
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I stop there everytime going to and from my up north house.


[Linked Image from i.pinimg.com]

Z
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las Offline
Campfire 'Bwana
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Campfire 'Bwana
L
Joined: Jun 2001
Posts: 32,066
Old trapper cabin at Byers was winter family home for Suzzane (sp?) Sommers, Alaska Magazine editor when she was growing up. Family fished commercially in summer, wintered at Byers. Don Sheldon flew them in and out, before road.


Sommers is a friend of my wife's good friend Diane. Diane says Sommers goes back every year and takes pictures of the cabin as it deteriorates.

Last edited by las; 04/13/19.

The only true cost of having a dog is its death.


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