This text has been sponsored by The Hans Basis.
It was a nice summer time night in 2022 when just a few boys from Chwara village of Pauri Garhwal district stepped out to graze their livestock within the close by forest. Sadly, they didn’t know the hidden tragedy that awaited them.
The forest had caught hearth!
“Once we noticed the hearth had damaged out, the entire villagers helplessly ran helter-skelter. Whereas some poured buckets filled with water, some tried to save lots of the fodder, firewood, and livestock of their houses,” 21-year-old Pritam Singh, who lives in the identical village tells The Higher India.
“We remembered how some youngsters had gone out to graze their cows and goats. Everybody was stressed. After a while, we noticed them getting back from the burning forest. Whereas that they had sustained extreme burns, we came upon that their goats had succumbed to accidents,” he provides.
This occurs nearly yearly in Uttarakhand.
Notably, within the forest hearth season of 2022, a complete of 1,443 incidents of forest fires had been reported — together with 642 in Garhwal, 724 in Kumaon, and 77 in protected wildlife zones. This was estimated to have an effect on 2,432.62 hectares of forest space and an financial lack of over Rs 60 lakh.

Dedication to guard the village from forest fires
In contrast to most younger individuals who migrate to cities seeking higher job alternatives, Pritam selected to remain in his village after finishing his larger research in 2022. “I didn’t wish to go away my native place,” he says.
A graduate with a Bachelor of Arts (BA) diploma, Pritam is at present getting ready for the Authorities examinations and has volunteered to grow to be a firefighter.
Rising up in Pauri Garhwal, Pritam says that he has witnessed many forest fires, together with the dreadful 2022 fires. “Now we have a big cowl of Chir Pine timber which are wealthy in natural polymers. This makes them straightforward to catch hearth and therefore weak to forest fires,” he factors out.
As per the Forest Survey of India 2019, the forest cowl in Uttarakhand is 24,303.04 sq km, which is 45.44 p.c of the state’s geographical space. And of the entire forest cowl, greater than one-third (32.75 p.c) is vulnerable to forest fires.

Highlighting the explanations that trigger forest fires, he says, “Incidences of forest fires are frequent between February and mid-July. These fires are exacerbated largely by human actions similar to slash-and-burn agriculture, using hearth for land clearance, and reckless disposal of lit beedi and cigarettes. Moreover, there may be additionally a fantasy amongst native villagers that in the event that they set the forest ablaze, it induces rain that can yield nutritious fodder for livestock.”
“These fires not solely consequence within the lack of useful forest sources and wildlife but additionally have an effect on people in direct and oblique methods. It pollutes our water sources that originate from forests. It additionally will increase their threat of drying up. Normally, villagers retailer firewood and fodder of their houses. And when these forest fires attain these habitations, they take a dreadful type,” he provides.
It’s to be famous that Uttarakhand accounts for 1.6 p.c of India’s complete geographical space. However when it comes to forest cowl, the state accounts for 45 p.c in comparison with nationwide forest cowl of simply 21.67 p.c — this signifies the wealthy organic heritage of the state and the urgency to save lots of one of many nation’s largest carbon sinks.
Understanding the necessity to protect the wealthy natural world of the state, in 2022, the Delhi-NCR-based NGO, The Hans Basis (THF) started community-driven efforts to lower forest fires within the state and promote environmental conservation and ecological stability. As a part of this initiative, the inspiration enlisted volunteer firefighters — like Pritam — to scale back forest hearth occurrences.

Following THF’s intervention, Pritam, like many different volunteers, was supplied complete coaching to sort out forest fires. Consequently, he was higher outfitted and ready for any untoward incidents related to people who occurred in 2022 and was in a position to reply to the emergency and management potential hearth incidents.
“We had been educated on the way to implement native mitigation methods to successfully management any forest hearth. We had been supplied with firefighting kits that included a set of various kinds of hearth rakes, a modified sickle, a shovel, a fireplace beater, and a instrument package bag. Coaching was supplied on hearth line improvement, biomass administration, security measures throughout hearth dousing, and makes use of of the varied gear that had been supplied to us,” he shares.
Explaining how he responds to the emergency, he says, “We first inform the forest division about any forest fires that happen within the space. In the meantime, we begin clearing broad strips of land of all inflammable materials like dry leaves and fodder so that fireplace doesn’t prolong from one space to a different. After making forest traces, we additionally throw sand to extinguish the hearth. Nonetheless, if the hearth is on a big scale, we attempt to forestall it from spreading additional reasonably than extinguishing it.”

Like Pritam, THF’s initiative of stopping forest hearth has seen 5,066 younger firefighters being educated in 1,000 villages below 10 improvement blocks of Pauri Garhwal, Tehri Garhwal, Almora, and Bageshwar districts.
Moreover, THF has additionally enhanced group resilience by reviving the ‘Van Panchayat’ — a area people group answerable for forest administration, in addition to encouraging the plantation of fire-resistant species, and elevating consciousness by Nukkad Natak (road play), rallies, wall writing, quiz competitors, radio applications, and jingles.
Consequently, the area has noticed a major lower of about 53.33 p.c — from 30 forest hearth incidents in 2019-21 to 14 in 2022. Equally, a 57.35 p.c discount was noticed within the space affected by forest fires — from 37.05 to fifteen.8 hectares in the identical interval.
Inspired by the outcomes of the community-driven strategy, Pritam requests native folks within the fire-prone areas to step up and reply to emergencies.
“The jal (water), jungle (forest), and jameen (land) belong to all of us as a group, so it’s our accountability to step as much as safeguard it. We have to take extra accountability and consciously enhance our consciousness in opposition to forest fires. Prior to now couple of years, we’ve been capable of bust myths amongst villagers and scale back excessive forest hearth incidences,” says Pritam.
“If we may do it, then you can also. This Forest Day, let’s pledge to save lots of our jungles!”
(Edited by Pranita Bhat; All images courtesy The Hans Basis)
Sources:
‘Uttarakhand loses highest 561.2 ha inexperienced cowl in 24 hours to fires; over 2,000 ha to this point’: by Shivani Azad for The Instances of India, Revealed on 28 April 2022.
India State of Forest Report: by Forest Survey of India, Ministry of Atmosphere Forest and Local weather Change, Revealed in 2019.