Concord firefighters battle a brush fire that came close to a garage and house on Joshiah Bartlett Road in Concord on Monday afternoon, April 26, 2021.
Concord firefighters battle a brush fire that came close to a garage and house on Joshiah Bartlett Road in Concord on Monday afternoon, April 26, 2021. Credit: GEOFF FORESTERโ€”Monitor staff

The statewide prohibition on any open fire and smoking in or near woodlands has been lifted as recent rains have reduced wildfire danger in New Hampshire.

The ban was put in place Sept. 22 following the stateโ€™s driest summer on record since 1895.

As a result of the outdoor burn ban being lifted, the kindling of open fires are now allowed if a permit has been obtained. This includes fires built for camping, the burning of debris or warming. Smoking in or near public woodlands or on public trails is also allowed.

The state remains in a drought, meaning โ€œweโ€™re not out of the woods yet,โ€ said Chief Steven Sherman of the N.H. Forest Protection Bureau.

โ€œWhile the recent rain has helped make up for the deficit weโ€™ve experienced this year, the increase in dried leaves and grasses on the ground that accumulate in the fall, combined with seasonal winds that accelerate drying them out, mean that thereโ€™s still existing wildfire risk,โ€ he said.

New Hampshire, which is the second most-forested state in the nation, experienced a ten-fold increase in both wildfire occurrences and acreage burned by them in August and September of this year compared with the same period in 2024.

Anyone interested in having an outdoor fire in New Hampshire must first obtain a permit, either at the municipality where the burn will take place or viaย nhfirepermit.com.

David Brooks can be reached at dbrooks@cmonitor.com. Sign up for his Granite Geek weekly email newsletter at granitegeek.org.