A mountain hemlock burned in the 2019 Swan Lake Fire, pictured June 29, 2021. (Photo by Matt Bowser/USFWS)

A mountain hemlock burned in the 2019 Swan Lake Fire, pictured June 29, 2021. (Photo by Matt Bowser/USFWS)

Refuge Notebook: When hemlocks burn

By MATT BOWSER

For the Clarion

When the weather deteriorates in the mountains, I head for those deepest green patches of forest at tree line. These groves of hardy, resilient and slow-growing mountain hemlocks hang on to the shoulders of our mountains.

The trees grow together so thickly that they provide excellent shelter from the wind and rain. You can always find a dry patch somewhere in a hemlock stand.

After the 2019 Swan Lake Fire reached high into alpine areas where mountain hemlocks live, I wondered how these slow growing, long-lived trees respond to fire. A comparatively rare forest type on the Kenai National Wildlife Refuge (31,000 acres or 2% of the refuge) that seldom burns, we have no historical information on fire in hemlocks on the western Kenai.

The Swan Lake Fire offered a unique opportunity to learn about the relationship of fire and one of my favorite kinds of trees.

Few shrubs grow under the dense shade and in soil acidified by fallen hemlock needles, leaving the understory open, dry, and inviting. The very leaves are welcoming.

Try alternately hugging a spruce and a hemlock, and you will quickly learn that stiff, sharply pointed spruce needles prick your skin painfully while the supple, rounded tips of hemlock needles make their branches soft to the touch.

The rich, dark green of their foliage and the often-irregular shapes of their crowns make mountain hemlocks easy to recognize, even from far across a valley.

As such obviously ideal places to take refuge, people chose to establish official and unofficial campsites among hemlocks along our popular hiking trails. Rusted cans, broken glass and scars of fire rings in hemlock stands far from trails testify to less regular use by hikers and hunters.

If you take a look around at the contorted, often fantastical shapes of hemlocks near treeline, you should be able to see that these trees have not had easy lives. Heavy snow loads, avalanches, violent gusts and desiccating winter winds have broken, crushed, and withered trunks and branches.

Unlike most conifers, where damage to the growing tip of the tree often leads to an untimely death, mountain hemlocks withstand their tops being broken off, redirecting upward growth to their remaining branches.

Insects and fungal diseases damage hemlocks, but we have not seen evidence of whole stands of hemlocks succumbing at once in our area like the familiar outbreaks of bark beetles in spruces. These resilient trees live to be the oldest trees we have cored on the western Kenai Peninsula, some of them having started as seedlings in the 1500s.

Because mountain hemlocks prefer moist sites, fires seldom happen in these forests. Six hundred to over 1,000 years typically passes between fire events. When fires do come, these trees are not fire-resistant.

Their thick bark might offer some protection, but hemlocks grow close together so that fires move easily through their flammable foliage, burning whole groves at once. Mountain hemlocks are most susceptible to fire where they blend into the spruce forest, which typically burns more frequently.

On the refuge, we know of few fires in the hemlock forest. However, a lightning strike on the southeast side of Skilak Lake in 2005 started the Irish Channel Fire, which burned for months and grew to 1,000 acres, much of it in a hemlock forest.

At least one small group of hemlocks along the Funny River Horse Trail burned in the 2014 Funny River Fire. In 2019, the Swan Lake Fire made its way up the mountain slopes east of Mystery Creek Road, including often visited hemlock groves on the Skyline Trail and Fuller Lakes Trail.

The Swan Lake Fire also burned 31 vegetation plots established and monitored by the Department of Agriculture Forest Service’s Forest Inventory and Analysis Program, part of a vast grid of plots over Southcentral Alaska. Since 2004, Kenai refuge biologists have also sampled this same grid of plots as part of our Long Term Ecological Monitoring Program.

In June and July 2021, we revisited 26 of the plots within the fire to look at how severely the fire burned and to document the plants growing after the fire.

Two recently burned plots were in a hemlock forest, providing a rare opportunity to see what happens when hemlocks burn in places where we know what the forest was like before the fire. Based on counts of tree rings from cores taken at these plots from 2001 to 2017, the trees ranged from 70 to 200 years old at the time of the fire in 2019. However, the forest was likely much older.

When we revisited these plots two years after the fire, we found that all mature hemlocks had died. The fire burned off much of the upper parts of the soil and consumed almost all understory plants. In their place, fireweed had grown in, mostly from seeds blown in after the fire. Tiny hemlock seedlings had already gotten started. We also saw a few spruce and birch seedlings.

Based on our recent observations and other information we have on how mountain hemlocks respond to fire on the Kenai and in other parts of North America, we can make some predictions about future conditions. We expect these burned plots will return to mature hemlock forest in 100 to 400 years as long as another fire does not roll through.

After having learned a little more about these groves of old mountain hemlocks where I like to take shelter, even for a quick snack, I appreciate that they are part of a dynamic landscape. We live at the intersection of biomes where long-range seed dispersal, fires, insect outbreaks and climate oscillations interact so that most of the forest is constantly changing. Hemlock stands in the mountains might be more stable than spruce forest, but they change, too.

Matt Bowser serves as Fish and Wildlife Biologist at Kenai National Wildlife Refuge. For more on fire and mountain hemlocks in Alaska, see https://www.fs.fed.us/database/feis/fire_regimes/AK_mountain_hemlock/all.html. Find more Refuge Notebook articles (1999–present) at https://www.fws.gov/refuge/Kenai/community/refuge_notebook.html.

More in Sports

Photo courtesy Pete Dickinson
The SoHi junior varsity and varsity wrestling teams compete in the Battle for the Bird at Soldotna High School on Wednesday, Nov. 26. The Kenai Peninsula Athletics Sapphire dance team performed the halftime show.
SoHi, Nikiski wrestling teams compete for Thanksgiving dinner

The Stars and Bulldogs faced off during the Battle for the Bird duals last Wednesday.

Runners of all ages gather for a photo in the Homer High School Commons after the annual Thanksgiving Turkey Trot on Thursday, Nov. 27, 2025, in Homer, Alaska. Due to icy outdoor conditions, the official run was moved to the high school halls. Photo courtesy Matthew Smith
55 turn out for Homer Turkey Trot

Each Thanksgiving morning, the Kachemak Bay Running Club and the City of… Continue reading

The varsity wrestling team is pictured after the Robin Hervey individual tournament in Kodiak on Nov. 22, 2025. Photo courtesy of Pete Dickinson
Sports briefs: Soldotna hockey, wrestling teams secure wins at weekend tournaments

SoHi hockey won the End of the Road tournament in Homer and the wrestling team gained 20 individual wins.

The Kenai Central High School varsity volleyball team is named the 2025 3A Volleyball State Championship Tournament, held Nov. 13-15, 2025, at the Alaska Airlines Center in Anchorage, Alaska. The Kardinals defeated the Nikiski Bulldogs 3-2 in a "rematch" championship game on Saturday, Nov. 15, securing their third state title in the last four years. Photo courtesy of the Kenai Volleyball Booster Club
Kenai Central takes home 3rd volleyball state title

The Kards defeated Nikiski in a rematch championship game on Saturday during the state tournament in Anchorage.

Soldotna High School wrestlers won six individual championships during the Lancer Smith Memorial wrestling tournament in Wasilla Nov. 14-15. Photo courtesy of SoHi Stars Wrestling on Facebook
SoHi wrestling sweeps Lancer Smith tourney, eyes state title

SoHi girls and boys took first and second place as teams, respectively.

Soldotna’s Gracelyn Altobelli attacks against Nikiski’s Addison Perkins on Tuesday, Sept. 16, 2025, at Soldotna High School in Soldotna, Alaska. (Photo by Jeff Helminiak/Peninsula Clarion)
Sports briefs: Soldotna volleyball claims third Northern Lights Region III title

The SoHi Stars will compete at the state tournament this weekend.

The Homer Mariners varsity football team celebrates their victory after the Division III state championships game on Saturday, Oct. 18, 2025, in Wasilla, Alaska. Photo provided by Justin Zank
Homer, Kenai football receive Division III All-State awards

Players on the Homer High School and Kenai Central High School varsity… Continue reading

The Homer Mariners varsity football team celebrates their victory after the Division III state championships game on Saturday, Oct. 18, 2025, in Wasilla, Alaska. Photo provided by Justin Zank
Homer football brings home back-to-back state titles

The Mariners defeated Barrow 20-0 on Saturday, winning the state championships for the second year in a row.

Homer's Nik Macauly runs past Kenai Central's Carson Cramer on Saturday, Sept. 27, 2025, at Ed Hollier Field at Kenai Central High School in Kenai, Alaska. (Photo by Jeff Helminiak/Peninsula Clarion)
Homer football tops Kenai

The Homer football team defeated Kenai Central 44-6 on Saturday in Mid… Continue reading

tease
Saturday: Brown Bears top Mountain Kings, win 2 of 3 at Showcase

The Kenai River Brown Bears finished up play at the North American… Continue reading

tease
Kenai volleyball ties for 3rd in Gold Bracket at West Spiketacular

The Kenai Central volleyball team tied for third in the Gold Bracket… Continue reading

tease
Soldotna football tops Lathrop, captures 20th straight conference title

The Soldotna football team defeated Lathrop 27-14 on Friday in Railbelt Conference… Continue reading