Playing with Fire
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The claim that ailing western forests can heal themselves if they are left alone seems based on a belief that
Since its inception in the aftermath of the Great 1910 Fire, the nation’s forest fire-fighting policy has been closely
Next to a nuclear explosion, there is no more lethal killing force on earth than a big forest fire. The
Of all the human events that have altered the character of western forests, including a century of timber harvesting and
In northern Arizona, along the north and south rims of the Grand Canyon, the National Park Service is considering the
In the summer of 1874 - not quite 11 years after he won the Congressional Medal of Honor in the
Editor’s Note: No forest industry association executive has ever equaled, much less surpassed, W.D. Hagenstein’s prolific output.
Editor's Note: This article was originally published in 2008. Much of what was written has indeed, unfortunately, come
The forestry world lost a giant last week. William D. “Bill” Hagenstein died September 4 in Portland, Oregon at age
By: Bruce Vincent Editor’s Note: In honor of those that Labor Day honors – in my mind those who gets
"Counties on Fire" is Evergreen's grassroots initiative to educate and engage the public in a dialogue
"Under the present management scheme promulgated in the U.S. Forest Service's Northwest Forest Plan, this early
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