How to Create a Fire-Safe Garden
Posted By Firefox on August 30, 2009
30ft + 70Ft =100ft of defensible space!
Lean, Clean and Green: the first 30 feet.
Lean: *Create an open area near the house free of fuels, woodpiles, and clutter.
*Ideally have a solid paved or clean, raked gravel walkway that allows room to walk the entire perimeter of the home.
Clean: *Instead of decks and wood patio furniture create flagstone patios, textured concrete driveways, and ramps.
*Use built-in seat walls, decorative rockwork, and built-in bbq’s with open spaces for entertaining.
Green: *Create an edible garden! Cluster plants according to water use with edibles, flowers, roses, and small manageable turf areas closest to the home.
*Use masses of groundcovers, flowering drought tolerant perennials, irises, and succulents to add visual interest. Mass shrubs in groups spaced at least 8ft apart.
*Place small ornamental or fruit/citrus trees 15 feet or more from house, thin branches to keep an open, attractive look!
*Make sure that plants are groomed and irrigated regularly to encourage healthy, green growth. Remove dead or dry stems.
Deer: The only effective way to deal with deer is with fencing. In the fire safe garden, try a pair of parallel 4ft post and rail fences in-filled with wire, 4 feet apart. Use self-closing gates at entry points. If you need height, think of topping the fence with a decorative pergola to support native vines like pipe vine or clematis.
Privacy screens or view blocking:
Use the rule of thumb: place single specimens or small groups of trees or tall shrubs directly in front of what you want to screen. Just like holding your thumb in front of your face to hide an object in the distance. Don’t plant a flammable “fuse” of hedging material that costs too much money, requires too much maintenance!
Be a good gardener!
Healthy, fire-safe plants thrive on good soil preparation, mulching and deep, water-wise irrigation.
*Start out right with lots of compost and organic matter tilled into the soil at planting time.
*Build the soil by adding compost and mulch to top-dress the garden in spring and fall. *Use drip systems set to irrigate DEEPLY each week to keep plants looking their best!
*When plantings become woody or overgrown, Let’s Face it, Time to Replace It! Old dry shrubs burns easily, no matter the type of plant, so recognize old shrubs that need to be replaced with something new and vigorous.
Learn More: http://www.fire.ca.gov/communications/communications_firesafety_100feet.php
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