'A problem in every national forest': tree thieves were behind Washington wildfire
Source: The Guardian
'A problem in every national forest': tree thieves were behind Washington wildfire
Tree theft, which led to the deadly Maple Fire in Washington, may be costing the US Forest Service up to $100m each year
Hallie Golden in Seattle
Sat 5 Oct 2019 05.00 BST
Last modified on Sat 5 Oct 2019 05.02 BST
When two men discovered a rare and valuable 90ft-tall bigleaf maple tree in Washington States Olympic National Forest last year, they allegedly set about trying to steal it.
But there was a problem the tree was home to a bee hive. The men reportedly tried to use a wasp killer to get rid of it. When that didnt work, one allegedly poured gasoline on it, and lit it on fire.
The result, according to a federal indictment unsealed this week, was an August wildfire that raged across the eastern half of the ancient forest, setting 3,300 acres of public land ablaze and costing $4.5m to fight.
Known as the Maple Fire, the smoke from the blaze also served to exacerbate an already bad summer for the regions air quality. There were fires raging in Canada and Eastern Washington, and as smoke from these blazes struck Seattle, at some points the city reportedly had the worst air quality in the world.
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The bigleaf maples wood was covered in a distinct pattern, which if harvested is extremely popular for woodworking and potentially worth thousands of dollars. Before the fire, the pair had allegedly spent months illegally harvesting these high-value maple trees and selling the wood, which is used to make furniture and musical instruments.
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Read more: https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2019/oct/05/washington-wildfire-tree-thieves