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A contractor uses a wrench to tighten the massive saw teeth of the circular saw of a feller buncher at the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) Forest Service (FS) Kaibab National Forest, Williams Ranger District's Cougar Park Task Order worksite, in Arizona, on December 4, 2018.

The saw can cut through 10" trees in less than two seconds.

 

âTimber Tomâ Dauenhauer, a timber sale administrator for the Kaibab National Forest, is visiting the restoration work site.

 

The 1,342-acre Cougar Park Task Order is part of the broader Four Forest Restoration Initiative, which is intended to treat more than 2.4 million acres of ponderosa pine forest across northern Arizona. The work within the Cougar Park timber sale, located south of Bill Williams Mountain, is about 60 percent complete. Current activity includes heavy logging equipment such as feller bunchers, skidders, and loaders. The ultimate goal of the timber sale is to improve forest health and reduce the potential for high-intensity wildfires that could threaten lives, property, and natural resources. The Four Forest Restoration Initiative seeks to increase resilience in the fire-adapted ponderosa pine forest by reducing tree stand densities to a more historical level, which eventually reduces the potential for uncharacteristic wildfire. This work also offers greater protection for residents living in and adjacent to the wildland-urban interface, where developments and forested areas merge.

 

USDA Photo by Lance Cheung.

 

For more information please see:

www.usda.gov

www.fs.fed.us

@usda

@forestservice

 

 

The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) Forest Service (FS) Kaibab National Forest, Williams Ranger District's Cougar Park Task Order has âTimber Tomâ Dauenhauer, a timber sale administrator for the Kaibab National Forest, visiting restoration work site, in Arizona, on December 4, 2018. The 1,342-acre Cougar Park Task Order is part of the broader Four Forest Restoration Initiative, which is intended to treat more than 2.4 million acres of ponderosa pine forest across northern Arizona. The work within the Cougar Park timber sale, located south of Bill Williams Mountain, is about 60 percent complete. Current activity includes heavy logging equipment such as feller bunchers, skidders, and loaders. The ultimate goal of the timber sale is to improve forest health and reduce the potential for high-intensity wildfires that could threaten lives, property, and natural resources. The Four Forest Restoration Initiative seeks to increase resilience in the fire-adapted ponderosa pine forest by reducing tree stand densities to a more historical level, which eventually reduces the potential for uncharacteristic wildfire. This work also offers greater protection for residents living in and adjacent to the wildland-urban interface, where developments and forested areas merge.

 

USDA Photo by Lance Cheung.

 

For more information please see:

www.usda.gov

www.fs.fed.us

@usda

@forestservice. Original public domain image from Flickr

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A contractor uses a wrench to tighten the massive saw teeth of the circular saw of a feller buncher at the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) Forest Service (FS) Kaibab National Forest, Williams Ranger District's Cougar Park Task Order worksite, in Arizona, on December 4, 2018.

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