Third time’s the burn
ESLC and Tall Timbers host successful “learn and burn” in Chestertown

After two reschedules due to unfavorable weather conditions, ESLC, Tall Timbers, The Lieber family, and members of the public finally gathered last Friday at Piney Grove Estate, just outside of Chestertown, for Burning for Birds, a prescribed fire live demonstration “learn and burn” event supported by Cornell Lab of Ornithology’s Land Trust Bird Conservation Initiative. “We are on every single easement every year, boots on the ground, talking to landowners about what they want to achieve on the landscape,” remarked Steve Kline. “If our landowners, who are obviously conservation-focused, want to do things like burning to enhance wildlife activity, we want to get them into the right hands.”
Attendees learned about the safe and efficient use of prescribed fire as a management tool and how its use benefits grassland bird and Northern bobwhite quail habitat. Part discussion and part live demonstration, speakers and participants included ESLC President & CEO Steve Kline, Katherine Thornton of the Natural Lands Project, Shannon Wolfe of the Maryland DNR Forest Service, Kyle Madgziuk of Tall Timbers, Kelsie Fronheiser of the Kent Soil and Water Conservation District, Luke Macaulay of University of Maryland, and Jack Hutchison of Quail Forever and the Natural Resource Conservation Service.
After learning all about cost-share programs, burn plans, fire behavior, and more, participants joined a skilled team out in the field for a safe and organized prescribed burn of restored meadows within the Liebers’ 61-acre conservation easement on the banks of the Chester River. Thanks to careful planning and execution, the burn was a great success, paving the way for grassland birds and Bobwhite Quail as Spring begins on the Eastern Shore. “The operations went seamlessly and made the whole burn process so easy,” commented landowner and host Jennifer Lieber, whose property in Chestertown was first conserved with an ESLC conservation easement in 1992. “It was a pleasure working with Tall Timbers and ESLC, and we are looking forward to another one!”
Here are five big takeaways from Friday’s big burn:














































































































