The Home owners Firesmart manual, Protect your home from wildfire. You and your neighbours can reduce the hazards of Wildfire by following these simple preventative steps.  Take the FireSmart Assessment test.  Is you home at risk? Ontario

Cette publication est également disponible en français.

Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources, would like to thank Partners in Protection for providing the information used in this brochure. We would also like to thank Alberta Sustainable Resource Development for allowing us to use their FireSmart manual as a model for this Ontario publication.

Waiver

Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources and the Crown accept no responsibility of liability for any loss or damage that any person may sustain as a result of the information in, or anything done or omitted pursuant to, this pamphlet.

The Rural Reality

Wildfires are capable of spreading at an astonishing rate. Forest fires can spread through the crowns of trees at up to 15 kilometres per hour.

In Ontario, wildfire is a natural phenomenon. Over the last several centuries, large areas of Ontario have been burned over repeatedly. Lightning is considered the only natural cause of wildfires and nearly 50 per cent of Ontario’s wildfires are caused by lightning strikes. However, the other 50 per cent of all wildfires are caused by human activity.

Over the last 10 years, on average, over 1,200 wildfires were started in the province each year consuming over 200,000 hectares of forested land annually. Sometimes families have been evacuated from their communities and homes and cottages have been destroyed.

If you live in or near a forested region, you’re living in an area often referred to as the wildland/urban “interface” and sooner or later you may have to contend with the threat of a wildfire. The best protection against loss, damage or injury due to wildfire is prevention. But there are also things you can do to reduce the risk of loss or damage to your property in the event of a wildfire.

This FireSmart Home Owners Manual provides you with information and ideas for steps you can take to reduce your risk.

A raging forest fire.

PHOTO: BILL BERESKA

Get Ready

Properly preparing your home and community doesn’t guarantee that you will not incur fire damage, but it does reduce the risks. Make sure your home is insured.

Some of these preventative measures cost very little and reduce fire dangers by a great deal; others require planning and a long-term commitment to change.

Let’s look at three areas that, if properly managed, may reduce the damage to your property should a wildfire strike.

Site PreparationThis diagram shows the Interface Priority Zones surrounding an interface building or group of buildings.

Any kind of vegetation is combustible.

Mature trees, shrubs, grass, even your woodpile, are fuels to a wildfire. Their beauty and practicality vanish in an advancing blaze. Managing the space around your house and buildings is of prime importance.

 

This diagram shows the Priority Zones surrounding an interface building or group of buildings.

A girl raking leaves.Do you have a cleared zone around your house and buildings?

The first 10 metres of space around your home is your “First Priority”. It’s the most critical area to consider for fire protection. A good fuel free space gives professional fire fighters a better chance to save your home from an advancing fire. A home without a good fuel free space around it can make firefighting difficult, if not impossible.

What to do?

Remove any shrubs, trees, deadfall or woodpiles from this area and keep your grass mowed and watered.

How FireSmart is your “Second Priority” zone?

From 10 to 30 metres out from your home is the second priority zone. In this zone, you need to reduce and manage potential fuel sources so that combustion cannot be supported.

What to do?Low stand density where trees are widely spaced and crowns do not touch or overlap.

Remove trees and debris that would support the crowning of a spreading fire. The crowns of individual trees should not touch.

Low stand density where trees are widely spaced and crowns do not touch or overlap.

Remove or reduce the number of evergreen trees in the area. Evergreens such as pine and spruce are much more combustible than deciduous trees. In fact, aspen, poplar and birch all have very low flammability rates.

Remove dead woody debris, thick shrubbery and mature trees that might provide the opportunity for a ground fire to climb up into the forest canopy. These are called “ladder fuels” which allow a fire to climb into the tree crowns, starting an uncontrollable crown fire.

Because fires spread more rapidly up hill, it’s important to extend the second priority zone precautions further on downhill slopes and on windward exposures.

Can you extend your FireSmart maintenance plan to the “Third Priority” zone?

The third priority zone begins 30 metres from any structure and extends to a distance of 100 metres and beyond. The idea here is not to remove all combustible fuels from the forest, but to thin the area so fires will be of low intensity and more easily extinguished.

What to do?

Trees and shrubs are cut back from houses.

 

Thin or reduce shrubs and trees that make up the under story, retain fire resistant deciduous trees, and manage the canopy to reduce the potential for a crowning fire.

PHOTO: RICK ARTHUR
Lawn or non-combustible material
- within 10 metres of building (0 pts).
- within 10 - 30 metres of building (0 pts).
 

These are…

simple economical steps anyone can take to create a FireSmart home, community or business site. For these actions to be effective, they must be maintained.



Home and business construction

Our second set of precautions deals with building materials and construction techniques. While it may not be practical or economical to apply all of them to an existing structure, many of these precautions are easily made. Others can be included in long-term maintenance or renovation plans or incorporated in new dwellings as they are designed and constructed.

Is your roof FireSmart?Images of gabled roofs.

The most fire resistant roofing materials are metal, asphalt, and ULC treated shakes. Untreated wooden shakes and shingles provide no resistance. They are ideal fuels for a roaring wildfire.

PHOTO: KELVIN HIRSCH

Metal, tile, asphalt, ULC-rated treated shakes or non-combustible material (0 pts) - the most fire resistant and remain effective under severe fire exposure.

Car parked in drvieway.

PHOTO: KELVIN HIRSCH

 Unrated wood shakes (30 pts) - provide no fire protection.

Even if your plans for re-roofing are years away, it’s still valuable to ensure that your existing roof is free of combustible debris and that no combustible materials such as overhanging trees or vegetation provide fuel for airborne sparks and embers.

Are your exterior walls FireSmart?

View of shrubs around a condo.

PHOTO: KELVIN HIRSCH

Non-combustible siding (0 pts)
Materials such as stucco, metal siding, brick cement shingles, concrete block, poured concrete, and rock offer superior fire resistance.

Materials such as stucco, metal, brick and concrete offer superior fire resistance to wildfire. Logs and heavy timbers are a little less effective, and wood and vinyl siding offer very little protection.

Is your home free of fire accumulators?

If you are designing your home, it’s wise to reduce areas that offer protection or hiding places for airborne sparks and embers.

Closed eaves troughClosed eaves, vents screened with 3-millime­tre mesh and accessible (0 pts)Closed eaves trough

Closed eaves, vents not screened with 3-millimetre mesh (1 pt)Open eaves trough

Open eaves, vents not screened (6 pts)

PHOTOS: DON MORTIMER

Closed-in eaves and screened soffits are better than those left open or unscreened. Decks and balconies that are not closed in and screened also pose potential hazards.

Fire suppression crews call all these open recesses “fire accumulators”. These areas increase the vulnerability of a structure to wildfire.

Are your doors and windows FireSmart?

Tempered glass has good resistance to damage by fire. Double or thermal pane window construction provides moderate protection, but single pane glass provides virtually no protection.  View of cottage surrounded by bushes
 

Single pane (2 or 4 pts)

PHOTO: KELVIN HIRSCH

 

View of deck with flowers in a plant stand.

 

 

Tempered (0 pts) - optimum protection is provided by tempered glass.

PHOTO: PELLA WINDOWS

 

 

 

House with windows.

 Double pane (1 or 2 pts) - moderate protection is provided by double or thermal pane windows.

PHOTO: PELLA WINDOWS

 

 

 

Don’t Be the Cause of a Wildfire

Diagram setting out distances between building chimneys and shrubs.

This set of objectives is aimed at not becoming the source of the fire.

FireSmart your chimney

Chimneys should be constructed to meet current Ontario building code requirements and should be screened-in with the appropriate approved spark arrestors.

Burn barrels and ash pits

For safe disposal of woody debris you should consider chipping and composting or bringing it to a landfill site.

If you must burn, ensure that burn barrel is at least 5 metres from any forest or woodlands, 2 metres from buildings or other combustible sources and that a 2 metre area around the barrel is cleared to mineral soil. Burn barrels should have proper ventilation, screens and should never be left unattended.

Emergency facilities.Power lines and propane tanks

Vegetation should be cleared well back from power lines, propane tanks and other fuel supplies.

Emergency facilitiesElectrical pole near branches.

FireSmart building sites have adequate emergency vehicle access, and a read­ily available water supply such as a pond or dugout nearby.

PHOTO: BRIAN MOTTUS Contact utility companies for clearing of vegetation under overhead electrical installations.

Shovels and rakes

Every home should have shovels, rakes, axes, garden hoses, sprinklers and roof ladders to assist in suppressing wildfires.

A Well Thought Out FireSmart Protection Plan

Site diagram showing buildings and proper distances between structures and vegetation.

A Prune tree branches to a height of 1 or 2 metres

B Store fire wood well away from the house

C Remove trees within 10 metres of house

D Trees thinned (crowns don’t touch) for at least 30 metres from the house

E Branches are clear of power lines (if possible bury power service)

F Remove brush, mow and water lawn

G Your name and lot number clearly visible for quick identification

H Driveway is wide enough to accommodate emergency vehicles

I Provide additional emergency exit

J Pond or cistern with emergency water supply

K A FireSmart ash pit or burning barrel

L Driveway clear of trees to a distance of at least 3 or 4 metres

M Chimney installed to code complete with spark arrestor screens

N All soffit vents and gutters should be screened

O Porches and balconies screened, crawl spaces enclosed

P Position propane tank with valve pointing away from house

Q Fire resistant exterior roof and walls

R Protective drapes and or shutters on windows to protect interior from radiant heat

 
Do Your Own Home and Site Hazard Assessment

Assign yourself the indicated number of points for each assessment area. The fewer points you get, the more prepared your property is to successfully survive a wildfire. If a question does not apply to your home, score 0.

Aerial view of home with proper protection.

PHOTO: CDF

Will your home survive a wildfire?

Home & Site Hazard Assessment

Important Factors Characteristics of Materials Point Rating Your Score
What kind of roofing material do you have? If you have asphalt, metal, tile, ULC rated shakes 0  
If you have unrated wooden shakes 30  
How clean is your roof? No needles, leaves or other combustible materials 0  
A scattering of needles and leaves 2  
Clogged gutters and extensive leaf litter 3  
What is the exterior of your home built out of? Non-combustible material stucco, metal siding, brick 0  
Logs or heavy timbers 1  
Wood, vinyl siding or wood shakes 6  
Are your eaves and vents closed up and screened? Closed eaves and vents with 3 mm wire mesh 0  
Closed eaves and vents with no mesh 1  
Open eaves, open vents 6  
Have you screened in your balcony, deck or porch? All decks, balconies and porches are screened or sheathed in with fire resistant material 0  
All decks, balconies and porches are screened or sheathed in with fire combustible material 2  
Decks, balconies and porches are not screened or sheathed in 6  
How fire resistant are your windows and doors? Tempered glass in all doors/windows 0  
Double pane glass:
  • Small/Medium
  • Large
 

1
2

 
Single pane glass:
  • Small/Medium
  • Large
 

2
4

 
Where is your woodpile located? More than 10 meres from any building 0  
Between 3 and 10 metres from any building 3  
Less than 3 metres from any building 6  
Is your home set back from the edge of a slope? Building is located on the bottom or lower portion of a hill 0  
Building located on the mid to upper portion or crest of a hill 6  
What type of forest surrounds your home, and how far away is it? Deciduous trees (poplar, birch) within 10 metres of buildings 0  
Deciduous trees 10 - 30 metres from buildings 0  
Mixed wood (poplar, birch, spruce or pine) within 10 metres of buildings 30  
Mixed wood 10 - 30 metres from buildings 3  
Conifers (spruce, pine or fir) within 10 metres of buildings
  • separated
  • continuous
 


30
30

 
Conifers (spruce, pine or fir) within 10 - 30 metres of buildings
  • separated
  • continuous
 


10
30

 
What kind of vegetation grows in the zone around your buildings? Well watered lawn or non-combustible landscaping material 0  
Uncut wild grass or shrubs
  • within 10 metres of buildings
  • within 10 - 30 metres of buildings
30

3
 
Dead and down woody material within 10 metres of building
  • separated
  • continuous
 

 

30
30

 
Dead and down woody material within 10 - 30 metres of buildings
  • scattered
  • abundant
 

 

30
30

 
Are there abundant underbrush and ladder fuels in the surrounding forest? None within 10 - 30 metres 0  
Scattered
  • within 10 metres of buildings
  • within 10 - 30 metres of buildings

4

3

 
Abundant
  • within 10 metres of buildings
  • within 10 - 30 metres of buildings

10

7

 
The Wildfire Hazard Level for your home is:              Total Score  

Low <21 points Moderate 21-29 points High 30-35 points Extreme >35 points

 

Other FireSmart Considerations

Important Factors Yes No
Do you have adequate insurance on your home and property?    
Do you have the necessary fire suppression equipment (shovels, rakes, buckets, hoses, etc.) easily accessible?    
Are your burn barrels screened and at least 10 metres from combustibles and buildings?    
Are overhead powerlines clear of vegetation and at least a tree’s height away from nearest forest?    
Are propane tanks clear of vegetation and at least 10 metres from dwellings and other buildings?    
Are emergency fire services within a 10 minute drive from your home?    
Is your chimney safe?
Is your chimney clean?
Does it have proper clearances and stack heights with proper screens and fire arresters?
   
Do you have good emergency access to your property?    
Does your home and other buildings have a clear defensible zone of at least 10 metres on all sides of the structures?    
Do you have an adequate municipal or on site water supply in case of fire?    
Does your family have an emergency fire plan?    

 

Emergency Phone Numbers

Find and copy down the emergency numbers for your area and keep them in a visible area close to your telephone.

Fire Department: _______________________________

Police: _______________________________

To report a wildfire call:

Northwestern Ontario 1-888-284- FIRE (3473) or

Northeastern Ontario 1-888-863- FIRE (3473)

Central and Southern Ontario – Call your local municipal fire department

Provide as much detail as you can, such as:

Location or Address of Fire: _____________________________________________

Nearest Municipality: __________________________________________________

Geographic / Lake Name: _______________________________________________

Township: ___________________ Fire Condition: __________________________

Values Threatened: _______________________ Estimated Size of Fire: ___(Ha.)

Person Making Report: _________________________________________________

Contact: _________________________________

Map of Ontario with phone numbers for each fire region.

For more information about protecting your home and community from wildfire, contact your local fire department or Ministry of Natural Resources, Fire Management office.

Fire ravaged forest.

51847

(25k P.R., 04 03 31)

ISBN 0-7794-5836-2