Mountain Pine Beetles Affecting Steamboat Springs Real Estate
Did you hear the one about the tourist who wanted to know where he could get one of those pretty red pine trees to take back home? If you haven’t heard it, you don’t live in Colorado.
Colorado is being infested with mountain pine beetles that turn lodgepole pines from a healthy green to a pretty red (as they die) to a ugly brown stump. Fortunately, the beetles only like lodgepole pines. The bad news is that Colorado is full of them.

Since the beetles began eating their way through Colorado in 1996, over 1.5 million acres of trees have been infested. In five more years, the beetles will kill another 6 million acres. It’s not just Colorado seeing millions of acres of pines destroyed. Wyoming, South Dakota, Washington, Oregon, Utah, Montana and Idaho, and Canada will also lose their lodgepole pines to the bark beetle.
The mature trees are the ones being attacked. As they die and the trees are removed, view corridors are opening up and the landscape is being transformed. On a recent drive to Breckenridge where forest service workers are busy removing the dead trees, the dense forests have been replaced by open land. Another home in North Routt used to be tucked into a grove of pines. It now has spectacular views right off the deck.
Steamboat Springs hasn’t been hit as badly as some areas (yet). The forests around Steamboat have a mixture of lodgepole pines, fir, and aspen. In Routt National Forest, 20% of the trees are lodgepole pines.
Some areas have it worse:
- Areas around Vail have lost over 90% of their lodgepole pines. Entire mountain sides are red and gray.
- In Grand County (where Winter Park is located), Lodgepole pines are the dominant tree species . The beetles ate all the mature trees and are now eating their way through the 4″ trees.
For years, forest officials actively tried to battle the beetles by spraying with Carbaryl. Homeowners thought they could apply the pesticide for 10-20 years for the same price as tree removal, but it hasn’t worked. The bark beetle has won.
Ski resorts like Steamboat have a special interest in keeping the trees alive. Trees act as a natural wind break. They keep the Champagne Powder where it belongs–on the slopes–and not two counties over.
Steamboat is also known for its tree skiing.
Without the pines, Steamboat ski area will be a different mountain. The beetles cannot be stopped, but resorts are very interested in save the trees along ridgelines. It is not only an aesthetic decision, but a financial one. Without the trees, resorts have to make more snow and groom more often.
In Steamboat, the Bashor Bowl will be the area most affected on the ski mountain. Bashor Bowl is the area where the Nastar course, the Terrain Park, and Rough Rider basin are located. There will be more green trails in that area once the trees are cleared.
Once the pines have red needles (usually the year after the beetle infects the tree), the risk of fire increases. But once the needles fall, the fire hazard lessens. This is because the worst fires are the ones that spread through the tops of the trees. The wind can spread fire from tree to tree, and in the lodgepole pine’s case, if there are no needles at the top to burn, the fire risk goes down. Fires at ground level are easier to control. The worst scenario is a forest with dead needles still on the trees and dead needles that have fallen on the ground.
The affected trees are being recycled as they are removed. If the trees are used within a year or two, they make beautiful hardwood furniture, trim, and hardwood floors. The beetles leave behind a fungus that turns the wood blue, making for some interesting colors and stratification.
The wood is also used for heat. Kremmling is building a plant that will process the dead trees into pellets that will be used to heat people’s homes. The trees are first ground into sawdust then they are pressed into pellets. Walden also has a plant that will process the trees.
The manufacturing plant will process trees from Routt, Jackson, Grand, Summit, Eagle, Lake and Clear Creek counties. Heating a home with wood pellets is cheaper than natural gas or propane, and the pellets are considered eco-friendly because they are carbon-neutral.
Posted: April 10th, 2008 under Uncategorized.
Comments: 4
Comments
Comment from Eric Hundin
Time: April 10, 2008, 9:16 pm
I found your blog on MSN Search. Nice writing. I will check back to read more.
Eric Hundin
Pingback from Colorado Senior Living Communities and Retirement Homes » Blog Archive » Mountain Pine Beetles Affecting Steamboat Springs
Time: April 10, 2008, 10:01 pm
[...] Eliese Pivarnik published an entertaining and interesting post on Mountain Pine Beetles Affecting Steamboat SpringsSee below for a small excerpt of the post: [...]
Comment from Eliese Pivarnik
Time: June 15, 2008, 5:05 pm
Thanks, Eric. Stop back anytime.
Comment from Elmer Bensinger
Time: September 22, 2008, 12:20 pm
Has anyone ever tried treating the tree’s from the core out, using a sytem called Mauget. We have done it in WA, state for the japanese Beetle very successfully. I would hope that someone is trying something to stop this. I believe that the Mauget treatment may just work sense after it is inserted into the trunk of the tree, the product is then taken up and dispersed throughout the rest of the body of the tree that is treated.



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