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Some
Common Sense Thoughts on Homes and Wildfires
While many people picture
or assume wildfire is always a solid wall of flame,
somewhat like an avalanche of snow that consumes
everything in its path, this is usually not the case.
What is more common, especially in Wildland Urban
Interface areas, is a wind driven fire, spreading
sporadically by opportunistic seeking embers, riding the
air currents. Therefore, the way to defend a home
against wildfire is twofold:
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Keep flames at least
100 feet away by the use of defensible space.
Research has shown that at this distance flames
from a wildfire will not have enough energy to
ignite the typical walls in an urban home. This is
why the carefully planned removal of much of the
flammable vegetation within this zone results in a
pleasing-to-the-eye area, known as survivable or
defensible space. Flame lengths, which are as tall
as 100’ in an out of control wildfire are reduced to
a much more manageable length of two to five feet in
this clean park-like setting.
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Once this
defensible space is created,
maintain it. If this is done
correctly, the second year will be half as
difficult as the first, while the third year
will be only half as difficult as the second.
After three years routine maintenance will be
relatively easy.
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Since the objective
is to create a health, open park-like setting,
this often involves competitive wild grasses or
other low vegetation spreading between the
selected remaining plants. All one has to
do is keep the playing field or ecosystem tipped
in favor of the desired plants, and nature will
do the rest.
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Create an inner zone
where these reduced intensity fires have no ability
to ignite anything. This 30’ area should be "lean,
green, and clean". Some suggested methods to
accomplish this are as follows and all are common
sense ways to deny successful landings for the
opportunistic seeking embers:
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Do not have a cedar
shake roof. For that matter do not have any roof
rated less than class A or allow easily
ignitable fuels, such as pine needles, to
accumulate on it.
-
Do not have open,
dirty, cluttered wooden decks. If there is a
space between the bottom of the deck and the
ground between one inch and three feet then keep
this area free of debris.
-
Do not openly stack
firewood next to the walls in fire season.
Either enclose the fire wood or delay wood
getting till the fall.
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Do not plant
flammable junipers next to the home's walls and
under the eaves of the roof.
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Do keep at least a
30' wide watered lawn. In reality this is not
much area and is relatively easy to accomplish.
Eliminating flammable fuels next to the home is
the single best method of preventing home loss
to wildfire.
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Do keep up with the
maintenance of the defensible space. This is
the second most important thing you can do.
-
Do have
neighborhood meetings to discuss fire safety.
In many cases these can be held in conjunction
with road meetings and etc. Collaborated with
the neighbors and practice the old adage that
every chain is only as strong as its weakest
link.
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An excellent
publication on defensible space, wildfire, and
related topics is Protecting and Landscaping
Homes in the Wildland Urban Interface, available
as a free downloadable document at the
University of Idaho Extension Service.
This information was taken from
Protecting the
Idaho Panhandle website. To find out
more about fire safety, go to their website.
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