SEARCH

Main Content

6 Steps to Protect Your Home from Wildfires

Santa Barbara Palm Trees Burning in The Thomas Fire Anxiety continues to be high for residents of Santa Barbara County, where the Thomas wildfire continues to destroy the landscape
Do you know how to protect your home from wildfires? If you like in Santa Barbara, you should! The New York Times warns Californians that the recent cycle of drought and deluge in the Golden State led to the massive wildfires we’re currently experiencing. Cal Fire cautions that our severe fire weather will continue, pushing the Thomas Fire further into Santa Barbara County. The communities now threatened include CarpinteriaMontecito and Summerland.
Proper preparation can really make the difference between a saved home or a pile of embers during a wildfire. Here are 6 important steps any homeowner can take to protect their property if fire comes licking at the doorstep. There’s still time to protect your home from wildfires.

  1. Clear combustible debris from around your home

The first step is often the most effective, and it’s a doable project for a homeowner: clear combustible debris from around the house. This includes obvious things like dry grass, brush, stacks of firewood and debris – and some not so obvious things like a wood fence and even a wooden deck. Defensible spaces should stretch out at least 30 feet from a house, and large concentric rings of fuel reduction set further out improve the odds. The clearer the area, the better the chance a fire crew will stay to protect your property.

  1. Secure your home’s eaves and vent openings

Eaves and vent openings are a perfect place for embers to fly into and start a home ablaze from the interior. Making sure they are properly screened and maintained may seem like a little detail, but it’s often the first-place embers can enter a house in a wildfire. Even keeping gutters clean can help protect your home’s vulnerable eaves.

  1. Protect your home’s roof

Roofs are often the most vulnerable part of a house in a fire, so it goes without saying that cedar shakes are out of the question – even in urban areas. Class A rated roofs are the norm, including many asphalt shingle types, but tile and steel are preferred options. Same goes for siding—a shingle or wood wall offers very poor fire resistance while fiber cement or stucco stands up well. A low or non-flammable underlayment dramatically improves the fire resistance.

  1. Upgrade your windows and drapes

Windows are exceptionally venerable, as the intense heat can go right through and actually catch drapes and furniture on fire. The easy solution is replacing the window fabric with a more heat-resistant product. Windows can break as well, so smaller tempered units are more stable than large windows. The best choice is installing outside non-combustible shutters which can be quickly closed in an emergency.

  1. Plan your home to be fire-resistant from the ground up

Designing a new abode provides the perfect opportunity to incorporate fire-ready measures to protect your home from wildfires. Providing good access to the property for emergency vehicles is a must. Avoid leaving places for embers to lodge and cause a hotspot. Sprinklers help but, alas, someone needs be there to turn them on – so having a standing water source for firefighters can be just as effective.

  1. Select a fire-resistant site

“Location, location, location” is not just a tagline for resellers. Placing a house in a thick stand of trees is plainly asking for trouble, but so is setting a home on a hilltop or overhanging a prominent rock outcropping where it becomes a clear target for a moving fire.
As you can see, a few simple steps can make all the difference in protecting homes from mother nature’s fury in the form of wildfires. Don’t let the destruction keep you from moving here. If you’re looking for a new home in Montecito, Hope Ranch or any of Santa Barbara’s upscale communities, please call me at 805.886.9378 or email me at Cristal@montecito-estate.com.

Trigger Page Preview Option Popup
Page Preview Save