Big Basin Redwoods State Park is recovering after fires heavily damaged California’s oldest protected natural area.

Eight months ago lightning storms started more than 650 fires in Northern California. Today, Big Basin Redwoods State Park is still closed. But during a guided visit recently, life was reappearing on blackened redwood trees. Small flowers stood out on the burned land.

“I think nature is finding a way,” State Parks environmental scientist Joanne Kerbavaz said.FILE New growth on burned trees from the 2020 CZU Lightning Complex Fire is seen at Big Basin Redwoods State Park in Boulder Creek, Calif., Thursday, April 22, 2021. The park which was scorched last summer after lightning sparked about 650 fires in Northern California, is recovering. (AP Photo/Nic Coury)
FILE New growth on burned trees from the 2020 CZU Lightning Complex Fire is seen at Big Basin Redwoods State Park in Boulder Creek, Calif., Thursday, April 22, 2021. The park which was scorched last summer after lightning sparked about 650 fires in Northern California, is recovering. (AP Photo/Nic Coury)

The 7,284-hectare park usually has about 1 million visitors a year. But last year, many parts of the park burned for 24 hours. More than 100 structures were destroyed, including the historic park headquarters, shelters, picnic tables and more. Many bridges are gone too. In some places, root balls are still smoking, leaving dangerous underground areas, Kerbavaz said.

Since last August, damage experts have been trying to identify materials and waste that need to be removed. In many ways, the park does not look much different than it did soon after the fire.

An Associated Press reporter and photographer walked on the Redwood Trail a week after the fire. They confirmed that most of the ancient redwoods had survived. The trees are about 2,000 years old and among the tallest living things on Earth.

The next eight to 10 months will be spent cleaning up the park. It will be up to a year before the public can safely use trails beyond a small coastal area, State Parks District Superintendent Chris Spohrer said.

But no one should expect an exact rebuilding of what was lost, he noted.

“We need to be setting expectations for the public that when they come back, it will not look the same,” Spohrer said.

Environmentalists have urged quick action because state and federal officials are currently financing wildfire recovery efforts and new building projects. This change presents a rare chance to get more taxpayer money for public lands.

“I’d hate to ever suggest we think that a fire is a good thing, but there is no question it wiped the slate clean — and that’s something you just don’t see in any other existing park,” said Sara Barth.

Barth is executive director of Sempervirens Fund. That group started an effort in 1900 to protect 15.5 square kilometers of redwood forest that is now in the center of Big Basin.

“When Big Basin was established, it was a beacon for the state parks system,” she said. Beacon is a term that means a thing that gives hope to others.

Barth added, “In this fire and rebirth, you have an opportunity again.” Redwoods are naturally fire resistant. In old-growth forests, most trees have burn marks dating back hundreds of years. Sam Hodder is president of Save the Redwoods League, a non-profit environmental group. Hodder used the term resilience – the ability to become strong and healthy again – to describe the healing process.

“The trees themselves will tell about resilience and recovery and the broader California landscape,” he said.

I’m John Russell.

Martha Mendoza reported on this story for the Associated Press. John Russell adapted it for Learning English. Mario Ritter, Jr. was the editor.

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Words in This Story

wipe the slate clean – expression : to forget all the things that have happened or been done and start doing something again : to start again from the very beginning

landscape – n. an area of land that has a particular quality or appearance