| Your first defense against wildfire is to create a Fire Safe landscape
around your home. This can be achieved by removing flammable vegetation
and replacing it with fire-resistive plants; spacing the plants in your
yard; and clearing away dead leaves on your roof and dry brush around
your home.
Defensible Space
If you are able to create a Fire Safe landscape for at least 30 feet
around your house (and out to 100 feet or more in some areas), you will
reduce the chance of a wildfire spreading onto your property and burning
through to your home. this is the basis for creating a "defensible
space" - an area that will help protect your home and provide a
safety zone for firefighters who are battling the flames.
Clearing all flammable vegetation a minimum of 30 feet around
your home and other structures will not only provide you with the
greatest chance for survival, it is also required by California law.
But this does not mean you have to live with a ring a bare dirt
around your home. You can create a defensible space and also beautify
your property.
Fire Safe
Landscaping
You can start with the native vegetation around your home. Many of the
plants that grow naturally in your area are highly flammable during the
summer and can actually "fuel" a wildfire, causing it to
spread rapidly through your neighborhood. Removing flammable native
vegetation and replacing it with low-growing, fire resistive plants is
one of the easiest and most effective ways to create a defensible space.
You should select landscape vegetation based on fire resistance and
ease of maintenance, as well as visual enhancement of your property. In
general, fire resistive plants:
- grow close to the ground;
- have a low sap or resin content;
- grow without accumulating dead branches, needles or leaves;
- are easily maintained and pruned;
- and are drought-tolerant in some cases.
Some of the more common species of fire resistive plants are
rosemary, African daisy, ice plant and periwinkle.
Contact your fire department or local nursery to find out which fire
resistive plants are adapted to the climate in your area. Stay away from
unsafe ornamental landscaping plants, such as junipers, which may
actually increase the fire risk your home faces.
Other Fire Safe
Precautions
After you have removed and/or replaced flammable native vegetation
around your home for a minimum of 30 feet, there are other Fire Safe
precautions that you should follow, some of which are also required by
law:
- Vary the height of your landscape plants and give them adequate
spacing. The taller your plants are, the wider apart they should be
spaced.
- Remove dead limbs overhanging your roof and any limb within 10
feet of your chimney.
- Work with your neighbors to clear common areas between houses, and
prune areas of heavy vegetation that are a threat to both.
- Avoid planting trees under or near electrical lines, where they
may grow into or contact the lines under windy conditions, causing a
fire.
- If you have a heavily wooded are on your property, remove some of
the trees to decrease the fire hazard and improve growing
conditions. Also, remove dead, weak or diseased trees and trees with
an obvious lean, leaving a healthy mixture of older and younger
trees.
- Properly dispose of all cut vegetation by an approved method. Open
burning may require a burning permit. Contact your fire department
for local requirements.
- Stack firewood and scrap wood piles at least 30 feet from any
structure. And clear away any flammable vegetation within 10 feet of
these wood piles. Many homes have survived as a fire moved past,
only to burn later from a wood pile that ignited after the
firefighters moved on to protect other homes.
- It is recommended that you locate liquefied petroleum gas (LPG)
tanks and any fuel storage containers at least 30 feet from any
structure. Clear flammable vegetation at least 10 feet around all
such tanks.
- Clear pine needles, leaves or other debris from the roof of your
house and any other buildings on your property.
- Check and clean your roof and gutters several times during the
spring, summer and fall to remove this debris that can easily ignite
from a spark.
Remember that after you have established your Fire Safe landscape,
you must maintain it regularly. If you have any questions about creating
or maintaining a defensible space around your home, contact your local
fire department.
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