FEMA:
Avoiding Wildfire Damage-Checklist
FEMA:
At Home in the Woods-Lessons Learned in the Wildland/Urban Interface
Individual Chapters
How the Online Fire Map Works
Community Chips Away at Wildfire
Migration
Fire Inspire Tree Thinning
Fighting the Fuels
Big Elk Fire Sends a Wake-up Call
Blazing a Trail to Safety
Partners in Prevention
Add Flood Insurance to Wildfire Safety Checklist
Restoring the Land with Fire
How
Homes Ignite
Living
with Fire






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The threat of wildfires fires for people living near forested areas
or using recreational facilities in wilderness areas is real. Dry
conditions at various times of the year and in various parts
of the United States greatly increase the potential for fires. Advance planning and knowing how to protect buildings in these
areas can lessen the devastation of a wildfire. There
are several safety precautions that you can take to reduce the
risk of fire losses. Protecting your home from wildfire is your
responsibility. To reduce the risk, you'll need to consider the
fire resistance of your home, the topography of your property and
the nature of the vegetation close by.
Prepare Before a Wildfire
Find Out What Your Fire Risk Is
Learn about the history of wildfire in your area. Be aware of
recent weather. A long period without rain increases the risk of
wildfire. Consider having a professional inspect your property and
offer recommendations for reducing the wildfire risk. Determine
your community's ability to respond to wildfire. Are roads leading
to your property clearly marked? Are the roads wide enough to
allow firefighting equipment to get through? Is your house number
visible from the roadside?
Learn and teach safe fire practices.
- If burning leaves or dead limbs, build fires away from nearby trees or bushes.
- Always have a way to extinguish the fire quickly and
completely.
- Install smoke detectors on every level of your home and near
sleeping areas.
- Never leave a fire--even a cigarette--burning unattended.
- Avoid any open burning during red flag warnings, no burn
periods, and especially during dry
season.
Always be ready for an emergency evacuation.
Evacuation may be the only way to protect your family in a
wildfire. Know where to go and what to bring with you. You should
plan several escape routes in case roads are blocked by a
wildfire.
Create Safety Zones Around Your Home
All vegetation is fuel for a wildfire, though some trees and
shrubs are more flammable than others. To reduce the risk, you
will need to modify or eliminate brush, trees and other vegetation
near your home. The greater the distance is between your home and
the vegetation, the greater the protection.
Create a 30-foot safety zone around the house.
Keep the volume of vegetation in this zone to a minimum.
If you live on a hill, extend the zone on the downhill side. Fire
spreads rapidly uphill. The steeper the slope, the more open space
you will need to protect your home. Swimming pools and patios can
be a safety zone and stone walls can act as heat shields and
deflect flames. In this zone, you should also do the
following:
- Remove vines from the walls of the house.
- Move shrubs and other landscaping away from the sides of the
house.
- Prune branches and shrubs within 15 feet of chimneys and
stove pipes.
- Remove tree limbs within 15 feet of the ground.
- Thin a 15-foot space between tree crowns.
- Replace highly flammable vegetation such as pine,
eucalyptus, junipers and fir trees with lower growing, less
flammable species. Check with your local fire department or
garden store for suggestions.
- Replace vegetation that has living or dead branches from the
ground-level up (these act as ladder fuels for the approaching
fire).
- Cut the lawn often keeping the grass at a maximum of 2
inches. Watch grass and other vegetation near the driveway, a
source of ignition from automobile exhaust systems.
- Clear the area of leaves, brush, evergreen cones, dead limbs
and fallen trees.
Create a second zone at least 100 feet around the
house.
This zone should begin about 30 feet from the house and
extend to at least 100 feet. In this zone, reduce or replace as
much of the most flammable vegetation as possible. If you live on
a hill, you may need to extend the zone for several hundred feet
to provide the desired level of safety.
Clear all combustibles within 30 feet of any structure.
- Install electrical lines underground, if possible
- Ask the power company to clear branches from power lines.
- Avoid using bark and wood chip mulch
- Stack firewood 100 feet away and uphill from any structure.
- Store combustible or flammable materials in approved safety
containers and keep them away from the house.
- Keep the gas grill and propane tank at least 15 feet from
any structure. Clear an area 15 feet around the grill. Place a
1/4 inch mesh screen over the grill. Always use the grill
cautiously but refrain from using it all during high risk
times.
Protect Your Home
Remove debris from under sun decks and porches.
Any porch, balcony or overhang with exposed space
underneath is fuel for an approaching fire. Overhangs ignite
easily by flying embers and by the heat and fire that get trapped
underneath. If vegetation is allowed to grow underneath or if the
space is used for storage, the hazard is increased significantly.
Clear leaves, trash and other combustible materials away from
underneath sun decks and porches. Extend 1/2-inch mesh screen from
all overhangs down to the ground. Enclose wooden stilts with
non-combustible material such as concrete, brick, rock, stucco or
metal. Use non-combustible patio furniture and covers. If you're
planning a porch or sun deck, use non-combustible or
fire-resistant materials. If possible, build the structure to the
ground so that there is no space underneath.
Enclose eaves and overhangs.
Like porches and balconies, eaves trap the heat rising
along the exterior siding. Enclose all eaves to reduce the hazard.
Cover house vents with wire mesh.
Any attic vent, soffit vent, louver or other opening can
allow embers and flaming debris to enter a home and ignite it.
Cover all openings with 1/4 inch or smaller corrosion-resistant
wire mesh. If you're designing louvers, place them in the vertical
wall rather than the soffit of the overhang.
Install spark arrestors in chimneys and stovepipes.
Chimneys create a hazard when embers escape through the
top. To prevent this, install spark arrestors on all chimneys,
stovepipes and vents for fuel-burning heaters. Use spark arrestors
made of 12-gauge welded or woven wire mesh screen with openings
1/2 inch across. Ask your fire department for exact
specifications. If you're building a chimney, use non-combustible
materials and make sure the top of the chimney is at least two
feet higher than any obstruction within 10 feet of the chimney.
Keep the chimney clean.
Use fire resistant siding.
Use fire resistant materials in the siding of your home,
such as stucco, metal, brick, cement shingles, concrete and rock.
You can treat wood siding with UL-approved fire retardant
chemicals, but the treatment and protection are not permanent.
Choose safety glass for windows and sliding glass
doors.
Windows allow radiated heat to pass through and ignite
combustible materials inside. The larger the pane of glass, the
more vulnerable it is to fire. Dual- or triple-pane thermal glass,
and fire resistant shutters or drapes, help reduce the wildfire
risk. You can also install non-combustible awnings to shield
windows and use shatter-resistant glazing such as tempered or
wireglass.
Prepare for water storage; develop an external water
supply such as a small pond, well or pool.
Other safety measures to consider at the time of
construction or remodeling.
- Choose locations wisely; canyon and slope locations increase
the risk of exposure to wildland fires.
- Use fire-resistant materials when building, renovating, or
retrofitting structures.
- Avoid designs that include wooden decks and patios.
- Use non-combustible materials for the roof.
- The roof is especially vulnerable in a wildfire. Embers and
flaming debris can travel great distances, land on your roof
and start a new fire. Avoid flammable roofing materials such
as wood, shake and shingle. Materials that are more fire
resistant include single ply membranes, fiberglass shingles,
slate, metal, clay and concrete tile. Clear gutters of leaves
and debris.
Last Actions Before a Wildlife
If you see a wildfire, call 9-1-1. Don't assume that someone
else has already called. Describe the location of the fire, speak
slowly and clearly, and answer any questions asked by the
dispatcher.
Before the Fire Approaches Your House
- Evacuate. Evacuate your pets and all family members who are
not essential to preparing the home. Anyone with medical or
physical limitations and the young and the elderly should be
evacuated immediately.
- Wear Protective Clothing.
- Remove Combustibles. Clear items that will burn from around
the house, including wood piles, lawn furniture, barbecue
grills, tarp coverings, etc. Move them outside of your
defensible space.
- Close/Protect Openings. Close outside attic, eaves and
basement vents, windows, doors, pet doors, etc. Remove
flammable drapes and curtains. Close all shutters, blinds or
heavy non-combustible window coverings to reduce radiant heat.
- Close Inside Doors/Open Damper. Close alt doors inside the
house to prevent draft. Open the damper on your fireplace, but
close the fireplace screen.
- Shut Off Gas. Shut off any natural gas, propane or fuel oil
supplies at the source.
- Water. Connect garden hoses. Fill any pools, hot tubs,
garbage cans, tubs or other large containers with water.
- Pumps. If you have gas-powered pumps for water, make sure
they are fueled and ready.
- Ladder. Place a ladder against the house in clear view.
- Car. Back your car into the driveway and roll up the
windows.
- Garage Doors. Disconnect any automatic garage door openers
so that doors can still be opened by hand if the power goes
out. Close all garage doors.
- Valuables. Place valuable papers, mementos and anything
"you can't live without" inside the car in the
garage, ready for quick departure. Any pets still with you
should also be put in the car.
Preparing to Leave
- Lights. Turn on outside lights and leave a light on in every
room to make the house more visible in heavy smoke.
- Don't Lock Up. Leave doors and windows closed but unlocked.
It may be necessary for firefighters to gain quick entry into
your home to fight fire. The entire area will be isolated and
patrolled by sheriff's deputies or police.
Actions During a Wildlife
Survival in a Vehicle
- This is dangerous and should only be done in an emergency,
but you can survive the firestorm if you stay in your car. It
is much less dangerous than trying to run from a fire on foot.
- Roll up windows and close air vents. Drive slowly with
headlights on. Watch for other vehicles and pedestrians. Do
not drive through heavy smoke.
- If you have to stop, park away from the heaviest trees and
brush. Turn headlights on and ignition off. Roll up windows
and close air vents.
- Get on the floor and cover up with a blanket or coat.
- Stay in the vehicle until the main fire passes.
- Stay in the car. Do not run! Engine may stall and not
restart. Air currents may rock the car. Some smoke and sparks
may enter the vehicle. Temperature inside will increase. Metal
gas tanks and containers rarely explode.
If You Are Trapped at Home
- Stay calm. As the fire front approaches, go inside the
house. You can survive inside. The fire will pass before your
house burns down.
If Caught in the Open
- The best temporary shelter is in a sparse fuel area. On a
steep mountainside, the back side is safer. Avoid canyons,
natural "chimneys" and saddles.
- If a road is nearby, lie face down along the road cut or in
the ditch on the uphill side. Cover yourself with anything
that will shield you from the fire's heat.
- If hiking in the back country, seek a depression with sparse
fuel. Clear fuel away from the area while the fire is
approaching and then lie face down in the depression and cover
yourself. Stay down until after the fire passes!
Actions After a Wildfire
- Check the roof immediately. Put out any roof fires, sparks
or embers. Check the attic for hidden burning sparks.
- If you have a fire, get your neighbors to help fight it.
- The water you put into your pool or hot tub and other
containers will come in handy now. If the power is out, try
connecting a hose to the outlet on your water heater.
- For several hours after the fire, maintain a "fire
watch." Re-check for smoke and sparks throughout the
house.
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