Everglades National Park, at the southern tip of Florida, has been using prescribed fire since 1958 to reintroduce and maintain fire as a part of an ecosystem that has been altered by humans. They have been doing it so long that they apparently feel comfortable having park visitors bicycle or take a tram along a road that is used as a fireline on an active prescribed fire.
![Northwest River of Grass prescribed fire](https://wildfiretoday.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/01/Tram-and-smoke.jpg)
In 2014 Everglades prescribed burned about five times as many acres as were blackened in wildfires — 23,162 compared to 4,641 acres. Only about four percent of the acres burned in unplanned fires last year were on fires that were completely suppressed. The rest were managed, or not entirely put out and allowed to accomplish resource management objectives.
![Everglades prescribed fire](https://wildfiretoday.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/01/Katherine-Corrigan-April-2014-burn.jpg)
![Jack Weer](https://wildfiretoday.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/01/Jack-Weer-AFMO.jpg)
![Everglades fire engines Chris Corrigan](https://wildfiretoday.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/01/Chris-Corrigan-and-engines.jpg)
The park also has a very active aviation program, using helicopters extensively, occasionally several in one day. For decades they have used an exclusive use contracted helicopter plus call when needed aircraft, but in April, 2014 acquired their own ship, a Bell Long Ranger. For now they are using pilots under contract, but are considering, AFMO Weer said, hiring their own pilot. We have more information at FireAviation.com regarding the helicopter program.
In 2012 we told you about an excellent film that the park commissioned, titled The River of Fire. It was produced, directed, and edited by Jennifer Brown who at the time was an NPS Interpretation Division employee whose term appointment was about to end. Ms. Brown, now with Into Nature Films, has produced another great film about a 28,000-acre prescribed fire the park conducted in December, 2014. Check it out below:
nice to see them educate the visitors about the program. Some people that we talk to still think fire is a bad thing and destroys the landscape. Not sure what to think of the pedestrians around the fire.
Thanks for the nice story on my former park. The fire management team there is very good.