AnalogPackrat
Well-known member
I'm guessing you've never spent any significant time in the forests of North America, particularly in the western parts which see less rainfall than the east. Isolated and more regular fires of lower intensity are how forests in drier areas of North America evolved long before humans arrived here. Large thunderstorms with lightning are common in the (typically drier) summer months and fires were ignited this way by nature.What you call "proper" forest management is detrimental to nature. The layer of dead wood and shrubs is essential to wildlife. More than half of the insect species living in that layer are on the point of extermination...
Heavy underbrush from decades of (human) fire suppression efforts result in high intensity fires that are more likely to crown and destroy huge areas, virtually sterilizing them until seeds blow in and the long recovery begins. If you've been to places in the cascades where volcanoes have erupted (Lassen, Mt. St. Helens, etc.) you can see similar, slow recovery of flora and fauna after sterilization of former forests.
Clear cut logging that leaves heavy slash is also problematic because having no canopy to shade, cool, and trap moisture means the dead fuel is a tinderbox waiting to erupt. But removing slash is expensive, damages what flora and fauna remain after logging, and can exacerbate erosion. Selective harvesting mitigates some of these issues, but is less efficient (costs more, uses more fuel per acre harvested, etc.).
If you like wood furniture, wood trim and accoutrements in your home, wooden musical instruments, wooden structural components of buildings you inhabit/utilize, paper products, etc. then you are also part of the "problem."