T7GR Divine Fire Foundation Field Station

  • The Divine Fire Foundation Field Station (T7GR) is a conservation-oriented wildfire research and residency platform based in Southern Oregon’s Applegate Valley. Founded by T7GR, the station supports applied learning and research in fire-adapted landscapes, with a focus on wildfire resilience, ecological stewardship, and place-based engagement during active fire seasons.

    Situated within the Klamath-Siskiyou bioregion and near multiple federally designated wilderness areas—including the Kalmiopsis, Siskiyou, Red Buttes, and Cascade-Siskiyou / Anderson Butte regions—the station provides access to mixed-conifer forests, chaparral systems, serpentine landscapes, and post-fire mosaics characteristic of recurrent wildfire corridors in the region. Its location in the Applegate Valley places it within one of the most mature community-scale wildfire adaptation landscapes in the world, recognized for long-standing Firewise-aligned land stewardship, fuels management, and resident engagement across a fire-prone watershed.

    A defining feature of T7GR is its hybrid field-station model combining a permanent base camp with mobile wildfire research deployment. The Jacksonville site functions as a staging, residency, and coordination hub outside peak fire periods, while seasonal field operations mobilize researchers into remote fire-affected environments using expedition trucks, modular infrastructure, and low-impact glamping field camps. This approach enables safe, supported presence in landscapes that are otherwise difficult to access during active fire seasons, including wilderness-adjacent fire perimeters and recently burned terrain.

    Current research and learning activities include:

    • Field deployment of drone and environmental sensing tools in fire-affected terrain

    • Fire ecology and plant community response to burn intensity

    • Post-fire landscape assessment and restoration insight

    • Wildfire preparedness and resilience strategies for rural and wildland-urban interface landscapes

    • Remote field residency and observation during high-risk fire conditions

    The Divine Fire Foundation operates as a seasonal wildfire field residency, hosting researchers, practitioners, and conservation professionals in both base-camp and remote expedition settings. This presence-based model emphasizes situated learning, non-intervention, and applied conservation outcomes that inform land stewardship and public understanding of wildfire-adapted systems.

  • North America
  • 6777 Sterling Creek Road
  • United States
  • Jacksonville
  • Oregon
  • 97530
  • 42
  • 123
  • heather@t7gr.com
  • 2026
  • 2026
  • Heather
  • heather@t7gr.com
  • Heather Ann Kelly
  • heather@t7gr.com
  • Heather Ann Kelly
  • Heather@t7gr.com
  • 1-100
  • No
  • 1-2
  • 3-5
  • 21-50
  • 51-100
  • On Grid
  • 21-40 minutes
  • Onsite public programs
  • Terrestrial
  • Temperate Grassland
  • 1501-3000 meters
  • 3000+ meters
  • C (temperate)
  • Rural
Year Founded
2026
Year Joined OBFS
2026
Size of Field Station (hectares)
1-100
FSML Web Address

Private nonprofit organization?
No
Universities affiliated / Parent Organization
No
Federal, state, or local governmental partners?
No
Member of the Virtual Field
No

Additional Information

Private nonprofit organization?
Names of Universities affilated
0
Federal, state, or local governmental partners?
No
Name of partner
Tribal partners/users
No
MSI/HBCU users
No
Community College users
No
Member of the Virtual Field
No

Visiting a FS/ML

Open to the Public
No
Year round staff
1-2
Seasonal staff
3-5
Overnight housing facilities/# of beds
21-50
Distance to emergency services
21-40 minutes
Library
No
Hiking trails
No
Internship employment
No

Environmental Information

Biomes
Temperate Grassland
Minimum Elevation
1501-3000 meters
Maximum Elevation
3000+ meters
Köppen climate classification
C (temperate)
Freshwater habitats
No
Urban or rural
Agricultural fields
No

Research

REU host station
No
Dry lab space
No
Wet Lab space
No
Research vessels available
No
GIS capacity on site
No
Long term data sets
No
On site herbarium or voucher species
Formal Data Management Plan
No
Mesocosms, plots, stream diversions, or other sets ups for outdoor manipulative experiments
No
Date Joined OBFS
February 16, 2026