Posted by Firescaping on Jul 29th, 2010 | 0 comments
Fire officials praised the response by residents after a lightning-sparked wildfire endangered several Ventura county neighborhoods. Ventura county has put a priority this spring on educating the public about the Ready, Set, Go! program and the requirement of 100 feet of defensible space. Residents evacuated early, and firefighters were able to use the defensible space to successfully protect...
Posted by Firescaping on Jul 14th, 2010 | 0 comments
Wind-driven wildfires can move unbelievably fast, racing up hillsides, leaping canyons and sending burning embers flying miles ahead of the flame front. Residents may have only minutes to escape their neighborhood as the wildfire approaches, and for many, it may be the most terrifying experience of their life, buffeted by hurricane-force winds, with burning debris being blown through the air,...
Posted by Firescaping on May 25th, 2010 | 0 comments
The aftermath of a major fire, as anyone who has lived through a wildfire will tell you can be confusing and upsetting. Residents are faced with numerous decisions. If they have suffered a loss, there are decisions to be made about how to protect, salvage, and repair what remains, and to begin replacing what was lost. The state of California has created a document to help guide people through...
Posted by Firescaping on Apr 30th, 2010 | 0 comments
Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger has declared May 2-8 to be Wildfire Awareness Week (PDF) in California. Cal Fire’s theme for the week is You Provide the Defense, We Provide the Offense! based on the internationally recognized Ready, Set, Go! program. Events are planned through the week, with a planned roll-out of a new CalFire website called Ready for FireĀ on May 2nd and a kick-off event...
Posted by Firescaping on Apr 2nd, 2010 | 0 comments
Statistics released by the National Interagency Fire Center in Idaho reveal that human-caused fires are on the increase in southern California. Throughout the rest of the nation, the number of human-caused ignitions has stayed steady or even declined in some places. In southern California, however, the statistic jumped from 3200 in 2006 to 5140 to 2007, climbing to 5208 human-caused ignitions...