Firewise Landscaping

Wildfire

Wildfire is a risk in Florida anytime, but dry periods make fires even more likely, especially in wooded or rural areas. It’s not hard to make your landscape less vulnerable to fire. Firewise landscaping incorporates fire safety into landscape design to help ensure your home is safe even when a fire comes close.

Defensible Space

Creating an area of “defensible space” is one of the most important actions you can take to lessen the risk of wildfire to your home. Defensible space is a special area between natural areas (like woodlands) and your home. This space breaks up the continuity of plants, giving the house a better chance of surviving if fire comes near.

Your defensible space should extend from your house outward at least 30 feet, and it should be filled with plants that are low in flammability (firewise plants). These plants can help reduce the likelihood that a fire will jump from wooded areas to your house.

Firewise Plants

Lightweight fuels, such as leaves and small branches, generally ignite easily and burn rapidly. Plants with thick, succulent leaves—such as cacti, aloe, and century plants—usually maintain high leaf moisture content and take longer to ignite.

Small, needle-like leaves, like those on pines and cedars, are usually more flammable than wide, flat leaves, such as those on maples, oaks, and hickories. (The broad fronds of palms are exceptions to this rule, as they tend to have a relatively high flammability.)

Plant Placement and Maintenance

Most wildfires spread horizontally through materials that lie on or are within a few feet of the ground. But shrubs, vines, and small trees can act as ladders that carry flames from the ground to treetops. To prevent this from happening should a wildfire approach your house, prune the lower branches of trees up to 10 feet off the ground.

Keep tall trees away from the home and use short shrubs in foundation plantings. Groups of plantings should be separated by nonflammable areas, such as gravel, stepping stone pathways, or a well-maintained and healthy lawn. If you use mulch, try to limit it to the area of landscape outside of the defensible space, as mulches can be flammable.

To keep your landscape firewise, keep up with routine maintenance: don’t delay necessary pruning and irrigation, and remove dead leaves, branches, and plants from your property.

For a firewise landscape, remember: vegetation that’s overgrown, continuous, and close to a home may improve wildlife habitat or conserve energy, but it also increases the home’s vulnerability to wildfire.

Outdoor Fire Safety

In crisp fall weather, an outdoor fire can add warmth and atmosphere to cookouts and other outdoor gatherings. Sitting around a crackling fire with friends and neighbors can be fun, but there are some things you should consider to keep your backyard fire safe. Build your fire in a permanent or temporary brick or stone fireplace, freestanding patio hearth, fire pit, or chiminea. Place it on the patio or in an area clear of grass and brush. Try one of the many traditional cookout foods, like hot dogs, s’mores, or corn on the cob.

campfire

Hardwoods—like oak, hickory, and ash—make better firewood than soft woods like pine. They produce more heat, burn longer, and generate less smoke and soot. “Season” (dry) your wood properly; it will ignite better, burn hotter, and produce less creosote and tar than wet wood. Freshly cut firewood should dry for a full year for best results. Cut firewood to the desired burning length and split it into pieces less than eight inches across before stacking it to dry.

More Fire Pit Safety Tips

  • Check local codes on backyard burning, as well as fire conditions in your area.
  • Avoid burning a fire in an enclosed area. The area needs proper ventilation because the fumes can be harmful. Don’t use a fire pit in a screened area.
  • Build your fire at least 10 feet away from houses and branches of overhanging trees, and choose areas that are clean and clutter-free, away from brush and grass.
  • Pay attention to the direction of the wind and effect on the flame; use gloves when handling wood to burn.
  • Have water or fire extinguishers nearby; you can also use dry sand.
  • Keep animals and children away from the fire pit.
  • Don’t use lighter fluid to start a fire.
  • Be sure your fire is completely extinguished when you are finished.
  • Keep the local fire department number on hand in case of emergency.

Also on Gardening Solutions

UF/IFAS Publications

Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services