|
| |
Rules of Thumb
- Obtain and use latest weather and smoke management forecasts.
- Relative humidity will roughly halve with each 20ºF rise in temperature
and double with each 20ºF drop in temperature in a given air mass.
- Expect increased spotting when relative humidity drops below 30 percent.
Do not burn when the relative humidity is below 25 percent.
- Burn when mixing height is above 1,650 feet [500 meters].
- Do not burn under temperature inversions.
- Burn areas with low fuel loading and large-sized trees on marginal days at
the high end of the prescription window.
- Never underburn during a drought. Soil moisture is needed to protect tree
roots and lower litter.
- Don’t burn on organic soils unless the water table is very close to the
surface.
- Heading fires produce about three times more particulates than backing
fires.
- Burn when fuels are dry, but not too dry. Wet fuels produce substantially
more particulate than do dry fuels.
- Start burning logging debris by midmorning.
- Site prep burning behind chopping or other mechanical treatment gives best
results if done 10 to 15 days after treatment.
- Windrows are the most polluting of all southern fuel types.
- Broadcast burn scattered debris if possible.
- Do not pile when either ground or debris is wet.
- Dirt in piled debris will increase the amount of smoke produced by up to
four times. Shake out dirt while piling; "bump' piles while burning,
and repile as necessary.
- Use a smoke management plan. Consider smoke sensitive areas. Look several
miles downwind and down-drainage for potential targets.
- If nighttime Dispersion Index forecast is poor or very poor [less than
13], stop burning by 3 p.m. ST.
- Doubling the Dispersion Index implies a doubling of the atmospheric
capacity to disperse smoke within a 1,000 square mile area.
- Assuming 1 ton of fuel per acre is being consumed by smoldering combustion
during poor nighttime dispersion conditions, expect visibility in the smoke
to be less than 1/2 mile within 1 1/2 miles of the fire.
- Decrease smoke concentration by; increasing transport wind, mixing height
or plume rise.
|