810-Lancaster Farming, Saturday, October 19,1985 Watching tor ikes from tourers is a BY MERCER CROSS National Geographic News Service LICK KNOB, W. Va. - Life in a fire tower isn’t recommended for the fainthearted or the sociable. But it seems to agree with Lawrence (Bud) Harris, who’s been manning the 50-foot tower atop this 3,250-foot ridge for the past 12 years. The ridge is in the heart of the coal country of southern West Virginia. Thp wind in these Appalachian Mountains is never still. Sometimes it blows 30, 40, or 50 miles an hour. That’s when Bud Harris, whose weather-reddened face shows every one of his 63 years, hangs on for dear life as he clambers up the 74 steps to his glassed-in aerie. “When that wind blows, it’ll rattle that tower,” he says. “After I get up there, I don’t pay any attention to that wind. Sometimes I can’t hear my radio. That’s about the only time it bothers me.” Snowstorms and Lightning Weather can be a problem for Harris. He remembers the December storm a few years ago when a bulldozer had to rescue him fiom waist-deep snow after his food ran low. Another time, violent lightning drove him out of the seven-foot square tower into the two-room cinderblock cabin at its base. A lightning bolt knocked out his telephone and radio scanner and flicked a knob off his stove. Harris’ two-way radios and his telephone are his only links to .the outside world. When he spots a “smoke,” he confers by radio with other towers in the region. Using a sighting device mounted on the circular relief map in the center of their tower shacks, he and the sms 1 BLACK PldK iBUOW BLUE BfcOWM is/s - this birpisnnoujn AS A UJRDIN&SIRD MO 19 CLOSELY RELATED TO IRE HERON. THE SCARLET IBIS /S FOUND IN TROPICAL AMERICA UJH/LE THEM HITS IBIS IS COMMON! Y POUND IN THE SOUTHERN PARTQF THE UNITED STATES. THE SACRED IBIS OF EGYPT UtAS WORSHIPPED BY THE EGYPTIANS PHD EMBALM ED AFTER DEATH. way of life lonely other lookouts get a fix on the fire’s exact location. Then they notify state forest rangers, who put it out. Days go by without any human contact. Harris’ only company is a fat ground squirrel that lives in the rocks of the summit. He has oc casional nocturnal visits from a black bear seeking food, as evidenced by tracks around the cabin. Early in the morning and again in the evening, after he’s left the tower for the day, Harris sits in the cabin and converses with CB friends he wouldn’t know if he met them on the street. They’re his surrogate family while he’s on the mountain. The man he sees most often is Bentley Hartley, a forest ranger from nearby Pax, a 34-year veteran whose proudest possession is a national award for his fire prevention work. When Harris’ food and cigarettes run low, he notifies Hartley, who picks up Harris’ order at a store in Oak Hill and delivers it in his four wheel-drive pickup. Harris’ time on the mountain is shorter than it used to be. While he once ascended the knob for the entire fire season, three months in the spring and three in the fall, budget cuts have reduced the time to the six-week peak of each season. “When it gets too green to burn in the spring and when-it gets too cold in the winter, I’m anxious to get off of here,” he says. In the summer, he mows his neighbors’ lawns in Oak Hill. “In the winter,” he says, “I don’t do nothin’.” And in a few years, he may do even less. Bud Harris and his fellow fire lookouts, in West PBACH GREEK! LT.BROWM LT. BUIE LT.GR6EN 6 • 7. 8. 9. 10. Shorter Stays on Knob High above Lick Knob in southern West Virginia, fire lookout Lawrence (Bud) Harris uses a sighting device attached to a stationary circular map in his 50-foot tower to pinpoint the location of a “smoke" on the horizon. Harris, who's been in his solitary part-time occupation for the past 12 years, is one of a declining number of firewatchers nation wide. They’re being phased out by airplanes, advances in technology and budget cuts Virginia and around the country, are an endangered species The reasons are numerous: aerial surveillance, sometimes utilizing infrared sensors; im proved radio communications; better access to wilderness areas, with more reliance on the public for reporting fires; increasing use of unmanned, sophisticated sen sing devices on the ground. And tight budgets. Eight years ago, says Ralph P. Glover Jr., deputy state forester, West Virginia had about 50 operational fire towers. Now it has 23. In the budget of the Department of Natural Resources, the first item to be trimmed is fire prevention and the second is fire detection, Glover says. “Reducing fire occurence,” he says, “is what’s suffered a major setback, I think.” m. Louisiana Has Tallest Louisiana claims the nation’s highest tower, a 175-foot giant near Woodworth. Anyone with the nerve to climb to the top earns a “towernaut” certificate. The U.S. Forest Service began using lookouts in the early 1900 s, and their use peaked in the 19505, says John W. Chambers, assistant director of aviation and fire management for the Forest Ser vice. In 1953 the Forest Service had more than 1,800 towers nationwide. That number has declined to 922, of which only 381 are in use. Although the need for towers has lessened and many old towers require expensive repairs, Chambers says, lookouts provide &■} \\v /o-/o-3s both 24-hour surveillance and, “very often, a valuable com munciation link that you don’t have if the lookout isn’t there.” Old towers have nostalgia value. Glover says about six West Virginia towers have been sold. In Boise, Idaho, the Forest service plans to use one as a museum at the Interagency Fire Center, says Arnold Hartigan, a center spokesman. David B. Butts of the National Park'-Service in Boise wistfully noted the “significant attrition” of towers in the mountains of the West. He laments their loss in part because of their value as contact points for park visitors. “It’s the passing of an era, I guess,” he says.