Favorable weather conditions in place for hazardous fuels reduction work
Shasta-Trinity National Forest Service News Release
Redding, CA Nov. 28, 2025โ The Shasta-Trinity National Forest is planning prescribed fire operations this Monday, December 1, 2025. We estimate this work to continue through Friday, December 5, 2025, as weather conditions allow and pending all required approvals. We use prescribed fires to help reduce overgrown vegetation to help protect local communities, infrastructure and natural resources from wildfires.
Prescribed fires planned for the area include:
- McCloud RD:ย Beartrap Hand Pile Rx, near the Cabin Creek trailhead (200 acres)
- Shasta Lake RD:ย Interstate 5 (Skyline) Pile Rx, multiple sites along Interstate 5 between Packers Bay and Antlers Bridge (250 acres)
- Weaverville RD:ย Pettijohn (Vista) Pile Rx, near Trinity Lake (117 acres)
- Yolla Bolla RD:ย Red Mountain Pile Rx, south of State Route 36 (300 acres)
Those areas may close to the public for several days for public safety. Watch for warning signs along roads near all prescribed fire areas before and during burns.
Residents may experience smoke during the prescribed burns. For more detailed information about air quality, go tohttps://fire.airnow.gov/ online or download the app. When driving, slow down and turn on your headlights when you encounter smoke on the road.
We will evaluate weather conditions in the hours before a burn begins. If conditions warrant, scheduled prescribed fire activities may be canceled.
Stay informed about the scheduled prescribed fires through the forest website, social media channels, and InciWeb, the interagency incident information system. We will notify county emergency management officials when burning begins.
About the Forest Service: The USDA Forest Service has for more than 100 years brought people and communities together to answer the call of conservation. Grounded in world-class science and technologyโ and rooted in communitiesโthe Forest Service connects people to nature and to each other. The Forest Service cares for shared natural resources in ways that promote lasting economic, ecological, and social vitality. The agency manages 193 million acres of public land, provides assistance to state and private landowners, maintains the largest wildland fire and forestry research organizations in the world. The Forest Service also has either a direct or indirect role in stewardship of about 900 million forested acres within the U.S., of which over 130 million acres are urban forests where most Americans live.





