A Written Prescribed Burning Plan Helps to Accomplish Goals
by Mike Porter
Prescribed burning is one of the most important land management tools available to manage native plant communities for wildlife habitat or cattle forage in south-central Oklahoma and North Texas. When properly used, it helps accomplish land management goals, but it can impede accomplishment of goals when applied incorrectly. This article addresses the importance of a written prescribed burning plan.
I, like most land managers, would prefer to not write prescribed burning plans. I would prefer to "get on with it" and simply apply the tool of fire. However, safe and successful application of fire to accomplish specific land management objectives is far from simple. Sure, it is simple to light a match; but to make fire work for you in a safe, predictable manner is a much more complicated matter.
A well-written prescribed burning plan accomplishes several positive things: it forces us to thoroughly plan a burn; it forces us to understand and define the conditions when fire can accomplish our goals; it forces us to understand and define the conditions when it is not safe to burn; it makes us prepare contingencies for problematic situations that might develop; it helps us recognize our knowledge, equipment and preparation limitations for a prescribed burn; and it helps minimize our liability when we adhere to the plan because it demonstrates we are knowledgeable about fire and do not negligently apply this tool.
| A prescribed burning plan can be prepared for any legitimate situation. The following items and issues should be addressed in most prescribed burning plans: | |
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Land managers should continually strive to learn more about fundamentally important land management issues, such as fire ecology. Acquisition and application of such knowledge is necessary to effectively manage native plant communities.


