Schlutz Group

How to Protect Your Home from Forest Fires in Colorado

Fire

With wildfires being an increasing concern amongst Coloradans, here is an easy guide from the Colorado State Forest Service (CSFS) to help protect your home as much as possible. Wildfires are a natural part of Colorado’s forests, and if you live in the wildland-urban interface (where homes intermingle with wildland vegetation) you are at risk of being affected by a wildfire. While firefighters always do their best to reduce fire damage, ultimately, it is your responsibility to protect your property from wildfire.

DISCLAIMER: Taking practical steps to prepare your home does not guarantee it will survive a wildfire, but it does improve the odds. Any fire mitigation completed may also allow firefighters who might be present to more safely engage with the fire and structure protection. If the site conditions are unsafe, firefighters will not stay on the scene longer than what is safe.

The CSFS provides the following diagram to depict to the different ignition zones of your property. They suggest to “always start with the home or structure and work outwards.” Fire mitigation an ongoing process that is needed to give your home the best chance of surviving a wildfire.

There are two main factors that determine a home’s ability to survive a wildfire: the structure’s ignitability and the quality of the home’s defensible space. To reduce wildfire hazards to your property, minimize or eliminate nearby fuel.

Structural Ignitability

Structural ignitability is the likelihood the materials in/on your home will ignite during a wildfire. Ideally, home ignition risk is address  when the structure is in the design phase, however,  there are steps that can reduce the ignitability of an existing home.

Below are check lists provided from the CSFS that are listed on their website : https://csfs.colostate.edu. These checklists are for Coloradan property owners who wish to take steps toward mitigating their property from wildfires.

Checklists to Prepare Your Home for Wildfire

Top Priorities for Structural Ignitability

Top Priorities for Defensible Space

*Address as needed, more than once a year.

Firewood

Propane Tanks

Driveways

Solutions for Managing Slash

Properly thinning and pruning trees/shrubs as you address your home is important. Slash are the sticks and debris left from cutting trees. Slash is a fuel for wildfire, therefore, it must be properly managed and located as far as possible from the property.

  1. Spread slash and wood chips over a large area of ground to avoid heavy accumulations and large piles. Being close to the ground will help speed decomposition.
  2. Burn slash piles, but before doing so, always contact your county sheriff’s office or local fire department for current information or possible restrictions.
  3. Lop and scatter slash by cutting it into small pieces (generally less than 24 inches long) and distributing it over a wide patch of ground, to a depth not exceeding 18 inches. Material over 4 inches in diameter should not be scattered.

If you would like more information on how to mitigate your property from wildfires in Colorado, please go to https://csfs.colostate.edu/

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