Neighbors Helping Neighbors | Logan Krahenbuhl on Community-Led Burning cover art

Neighbors Helping Neighbors | Logan Krahenbuhl on Community-Led Burning

Neighbors Helping Neighbors | Logan Krahenbuhl on Community-Led Burning

Listen for free

View show details

About this listen

Prescribed fire expert Logan Krahenbuhl joins the show to discuss the growing movement of community-based "underburning" in Northern California. Managing the Plumas Underburn Cooperative, Logan coordinates teams of volunteers, students, and professionals to treat the most critical acres of the Wildland-Urban Interface—the areas right around people’s homes. Discover why prescribed fire is a natural process that restores forest health, how to identify the perfect "burn window," and why the risk of an escape is statistically lower than almost any other high-impact mitigation strategy.

In this episode, you'll learn about:

  • The 0.1% Risk Factor: Understanding that over 99.9% of prescribed fires stay within their designated boundaries.

  • Underburning 101: Why burning pine needles while the soil is damp creates a self-extinguishing fire that cleans the forest floor.

  • The "PBA" Model: How neighbors help neighbors manage fuel loads through Prescribed Burn Associations.

  • Creating a Fire Line: The mechanics of preparing a 2-to-5-acre unit using natural breaks and hand-dug "hand lines."

  • The Burn Window: Balancing fine dead fuel moisture (7-10%) with live fuel moisture to prevent "torching."

  • The Mosaic Effect: Why a "spotty" burn is actually better for biodiversity and erosion control than a total, homogenous burn.

  • Smoke & Health: A candid look at the carcinogenic risks of wildland smoke and the need for better PPE (like positive-pressure respirators) in the field.

  • The Dixie Fire Success Story: How pre-burning and thinning saved properties in Greenville before the mega-fire arrived.

No reviews yet
In the spirit of reconciliation, Audible acknowledges the Traditional Custodians of country throughout Australia and their connections to land, sea and community. We pay our respect to their elders past and present and extend that respect to all Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples today.