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Volunteers burn vegetation to protect the land in Berry Creek

Jamie Jiang
/
NSPR

John Faggard invited the Prescribed Burn Association to conduct a pile burn on his property in Berry Creek. He was born in Oroville, spent part of his childhood in Feather Falls, and can trace his ancestry to several tribes.

Jamie Jiang
/
NSPR

After Faggard bought this property, he discovered the remains of an old village where he said local tribes would come to live during the winter. He wants to make this area a designated cultural site.

Jamie Jiang
/
NSPR

In 2020, the deadly Bear Fire, or North Complex burned down Faggard’s home. He said the fire also cleared much of the thick, overgrown vegetation on his property. Now, he lives in a duplex in Oroville while he rebuilds. He said he wants to take care of the land, and the volunteers are a blessing for helping in that goal.

Jamie Jiang
/
NSPR

Volunteers from the Butte Prescribed Burn Association gather around a smoldering pile of vegetation, cleared during the day’s work. Earlier in the day, some firelighters cooked tamales over the heat of the biochar. Some landowners and other volunteers drove dozens of miles to this remote mountain neighborhood. A videographer from the Fire and Music Project based in Trinity County captures the moment.

Jamie Jiang
/
NSPR

Wolfy Rougle, pictured watching a pile of ashes burn down, works for the Butte County Resource Conservation District. Rougle is a botanist as well as a fire practitioner.

Jamie Jiang
/
NSPR

Some Indigenous people of California set fire to the land to best care for the environment. Rougle said after the dispossession and genocide of many Indigenous communities, very few California residents today have the opportunity to really live on the land, understand their surroundings, and observe the need for cultural burning. She said she feels fortunate for opportunities like this to rekindle a connection to the environment.

Jamie Jiang
/
NSPR

The Fire and Music Project, based out of Trinity County and serving many North State communities, is in its first year. It aims to immerse California artists and musicians in the prescribed fire world. A cellist and composer from the project attended the PBA burn in Berry Creek. One musician said the goal is to shift the public’s relationship with fire from traumatic to healing.

Jamie Jiang
/
NSPR

The Bear Fire, or North Complex, killed 16 people and displaced hundreds in Berry Creek and Feather Falls. Rougle said the effects of the tragedy are felt throughout Butte County.

Jamie Jiang
/
NSPR

A volunteer patiently puts out a fire after the burn.

Jamie was NSPR’s wildfire reporter and Report For America corps member. She covered all things fire, but her main focus was wildfire recovery in the North State. Before NSPR, Jamie was at UCLA, where she dabbled in college radio and briefly worked as a podcast editor at the Daily Bruin.