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Home > Latest News > Forest Ranger Crew Leads Fire Tower Removal Forest Protection Latest NewsForest Ranger Crew Leads Fire Tower Removal
June 13, 2012
AUGUSTA, Maine – A joint crew from the Maine Forest Service, under the Maine Department of Conservation, and the Army National Guard today moved an old fire tower from Norway Bluff for installation at the Ashland Logging Museum in Ashland. The crew worked close to eight hours, placing the 24-foot-tall, metal fire tower and its wooden cab, on Guard trucks for removal to the Garfield Road museum. The detail was organized and led by MFS Forest Ranger Amanda Barker, with help from MFS Forest Ranger Todd Weeks. It took two flatbed trucks to deliver the fire tower to the museum. The 1136th Transportation Co. based out of Calais provided the vehicles and crew. The tower was lifted on to the trucks by an excavator provided M. Rafford Trucking Co. of Ashland. It was unloaded by a self-loader log truck provided by Robert Flint Trucking of Ashland. Malcolm Milligan, 13, of Ashland, Boy Scout Troop 179, will take on the restoration of the cab as an Eagle Scout project. “We wanted to do this to remind the younger generation of the importance of these fire towers in protecting our Maine forests,” Barker said. The Norway Fire Tower was in place on the bluff, located in Township 9, Range 9 WELS, since 1914. The Maine Forest Service, Protection Division, no longer uses fire towers for forest fire observation, but instead uses air patrol flights. The site will be used for the installation of a new state radio tower. For more information about the MFS Forest Rangers, go to: http://www.maine.gov/doc/mfs/ffchome.htm For more information about the Maine Forest Service, go to: http://www.maineforestservice.gov |
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