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Reducing the Wildfire Threat to Your Home & Yard
Description
In today’s “Beyond the Garden Basics” podcast, we talk with Douglas Kent, author of “Firescaping: Protecting Your Home with A Fire-Resistant Landscape”. He has a slightly different view of thwarting home and yard damage for residents of the urban-wildland interface, who are increasingly keeping a wary eye - and nose - in the air for smoke. And as we pointed out in the Garden Basics with Farmer Fred podcast this week (Ep. 235), in our chat with University of California Fire Advisor Luca Carmignani, it is the threat not so much from flames creeping onto your property as it is blowing, burning embers hurtling towards
your house from a wind-driven wildfire. Those embers (or “firebrands”) can travel a half mile or more from the actual fire itself, whose ferocity is supercharged by winds that can reach 60 miles per hour or more. And it’s not just California. States throughout the West, Northwest, Southwest, intermountain west, and the South have been hit by massive wildfires, that the Washington Post estimates that 16% of all Americans - on 80 million properties - face the threat of wildfire.
Wildfires remain a danger across California and much of the unusually dry Western United States, as there’s still plenty of time this fall for grass, woody debris, and other flammable materials to become dry and ignite, threatening homes adjacent to wildfire-prone areas with flying, embers. We are all hopeful that we will have a wet or snowy winter sooner, rather than later. In the meantime, the University of California has advice on prepping your home and landscape to slow the destruction in case of a wind-blown wildfire.
"The smaller the fuels – pine needles, grass, and small twigs – the faster they can dry out, meaning they will be ready to burn again a few days or weeks after a large rainstorm," said Susie Kocher, a UC Cooperative Extension forestry and natural resources advisor for the Central Sierra.
When it comes to essential wildfire preparations in this age of drought, not every project requires a bank-breaking budget and an army of contractors.
There are small – but significant – home and landscaping improvements that most people can complete by themselves during a weekend or two, with a quick run to the hardware store and some basic planning and safety precautions.
"There are a lot of factors that play into your home’s vulnerability to ignition; small changes and upgrades can help reduce some of that risk for people living in high wildfire risk areas," Kocher explained. "The bigger projects like replacing windows and roofs are very important, but there are definitely smaller projects that people can tackle right away at lower cost that also reduce risk. The main goal of these actions is to reduce the risk that wildfire embers can ignite your home."
Kocher recommends these measures as simple but crucial ways to bolster your home’s wildfire resiliency.
• Let’s start with what may be the most difficult task to accomplish. Not because it is dangerous, but because of reluctance: taking out all vegetation and wood chip mulch within five feet of your home. Creating defensible space immediately next to your home is a top priority, so be sure there’s nothing combustible within this primary zone. Plants, mulch, woodpiles, wicker furniture or anything that can catch fire should be removed.
• And now for the more precarious task: removing debris from your roof. Because of its expansive surface, the roof is the most susceptible area of your house to embers. Removing accumulated leaves and needles is especially important if you have a complex roofline with dormers or other elements – that’s where embers gather, too, and could ignite flammable siding. And while you’re up there, give those g