A fire set intentionally for purposes of forest or land management, farming, prairie restoration or greenhouse gas abatement.
Sinònims
Examples for "burn-off"
Examples for "burn-off"
1Both fires were said to be caused burn-offs that got out of control.
1I flew here from the U.S. due to controlled burn of fire.
2A controlled burn is held on the giant oil slick.
3There could also be pre-emptive controlled burn-offs of some areas to bring safety to other areas.
4A controlled burn had injected the "ditch" with a dark, caustic, and apocalyptic haze.
5Officials plan a controlled burn to remove oil from the open water, the first since April 28.
1So, how expensive is it to do a prescribed burn?
2Compared to not doing the prescribed burn?
1It is getting harder to find enough days for safe hazard reduction burning.
2He acknowledged that hazard reduction burning was not popular with a large cross-section of society but said it was necessary.
3Climate change, hazard reduction burning, stay or go policies, local planning and arson are but some of the issues involved.
4Yesterday, the Country Fire Authority's chief officer Steve Warrington admitted the issue of hazard reduction burning was becoming an emotional one.
5Aside from not being in power, the Greens don't have anything in their policies to say they're against hazard reduction burning.
1A back-fire is a fire started for the purpose of stopping another.
2If his trail-break was built in time, Dave meant to back-fire above it.
3He had already run a little back-fire to protect the tents and the chuck-wagon.
4Sounded as though there was a tremendous back-fire, or else the muffler blew up.
5Dave did not dare back-fire on account of the wind.
Translations for muirburn