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Landscaping -- Firewise Design

Designing a Firewise Landscape

With firewise landscaping you can create a defensible space around your home that reduces your wildfire threat.

Before you begin designing your landscaping consider the following: Local area fire history, site location and overall terrain, prevailing winds and seasonal weather, property contours and boundaries, native vegetation, plant characteristics and placement, irrigation requirements.

Set Firewise Zones for Your Home

To help create a firewise landscape, remember that the primary goal is fuel reduction. To this end, initiate the zone concept.

Zone 1 is closest to the structure; Zones 2-4 move progressively further away.

Zone 1

This well-irrigated area encircles the structure for at least 30 feet on all sides, providing space for fire suppression equipment in the event of an emergency. Plantings should be limited to carefully spaced low flammability species including fire-resistant tree and shrub species.

Zone 2

Low flammability plant materials should be used here. Plants should be low-growing, and the irrigation system should extend into this section.

Zone 3

Place low-growing plants and well-spaced trees in this area, remembering to keep the volume of vegetation (fuel) low.

Zone 4

This zone, farthest from the structure, is a natural area. Selectively prune and thin all plants and remove highly flammable vegetation.

Choose Firewise Plants

Protect your home by planting native, fire-resistant vegetation. Less flammable plants include: dogwood, viburnum, redbud, sycamore, magnolia, beautyberry, oak, red maple, wild azalea, sweetgum, coontie, winged elm, black cherry, persimmon, wild plum, sugarberry, Florida soapberry, fringetree, ferns, wild olive, blue beech, hophornbeam, and sparkleberry.

Always Remember to...

Carefully space the trees you plant.

Take out the "ladder fuels" -- vegetation that serves as a link between grass and tree tops. These fuels can carry fire from vegetation to a structure or from a structure to vegetation.


   











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