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How
to survive wildfire
The Sisters Ranger
District hosted a discussion on August 31 in Camp Sherman about reducing
wildfire risk to homes in Central Oregon.
Jinny Pitman, Sisters Ranger
District Fire Prevention specialist, provided a small audience of local
homeowners several tips on how to make their properties and residences
better able to survive a wildfire.
Pittman emphasized that "we
live in wildfire country, and wildfires are going to occur. If your home
is adjacent to wildlands, whether forests, sagebrush, or grasslands, it
is at risk."
Local homeowners learned how
to lower their risk by focusing on a handful of steps around their homes.
Some of the most important considerations are the materials used in building
the house.
Wood roofs, decks and siding
are highly flammable.
Pitman advised homeowners
to consider more fire resistant materials, such as composite roof shingles
when renovating the home.
She noted that it is also
important to keep roofs, gutters and decks clean of flammable debris.
Everyone in Central Oregon who lives near a pine tree knows that it only
takes a few windstorms to clog your gutters with needles.
It only takes one "firebrand"
or live ember, which can be blown several miles outside of a wildfire,
to land in a pine needle-filled gutter to start a house fire.
It is recommended that homeowners
also keep flammable vegetation (tall grass, shrubs, overhanging tree limbs)
away from their house and deck.
Lastly, Pitman cautioned not
to stack firewood against your house.
Pitman was asked if there
was a good example of a home in the Metolius Basin that could survive
a wildfire.
She responded that she had
seen many more houses in the area that are at high risk -- because they
had not followed precautionary steps -- than ones that have managed and
lowered their risk.
However, Pitman said that
she was available to help residents assess their homes survivability and
discuss measures to remedy problems.
Local homeowners examined
a fire severity map, locating their property adjacent to National Forest
lands.
One homeowner looked on in
concern when she found her property in the Metolius Meadows subdivision
was next to several forest stands that are predicted to burn at the highest
severity, due to dense stands of small trees and thickets of shrubs.
Homeowners asked what could
be done on surrounding forest lands to help protect their homes.
Forest Service specialists
discussed how fire risk and forest health will be addressed across the
landscape in the Metolius Basin Project, and that there would be a focused
zone of fuel reduction around residential and high use recreation areas
and main roads within the project area.
This "defensible zone" would
consist of corridors from 600 to 1,200 feet wide where forest fuels are
reduced through thinning trees, mowing shrubs and burning.
For more information contact
Jinny Pitman at 549-7644. |
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