A power boat creates waves in front of forests devastated by pine beetles on Shadow Mountain Reservoir in Grand County.
It was around 2000 when foresters in Grand County recognized the pine beetle outbreak as a true epidemic, rather than one of the small outbreaks common in any pine forest
The mountain pine beetle, which is expected to destroy up to 90 percent of the lodgepole pine forests in Eagle County, has definitely done its damage in Grand County .
Within three to five years of dying, a lodgepole pine is so deteriorated and dry that it cant be sold as commercial lumber and you can see much of this useless wood left behind.
Many homes, surrounded by the skeletal remains of long-dead pine trees, look like the sole, untouched survivors of cataclysmic fires. Grand Lake resident Bob Means says that even after spraying all the trees around his house, they still had to cut several down.
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Wow! Worse the the epidemic I saw in 1986 around West Yellowstone on the Targhee NF...two years later, most of Yellowstone NP was turned to ashes...how the enviros can delude themselves that this is natural is beyond me....course these same people are more worried about global warming then radical Islam....liberals have truly become a culture of death..