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WILDLAND FIRES – PLANNING, PLANNING, PLANNING

Grass Fire     Perhaps you may consider a discussion of wildland fires a bit “off topic,” but some fires don’t start inside our barns, some come to our barns from other sources, such as forest, brush, or grassland fires, or embers coming from a small planned fire, or from a fire on a nearby property.  Whatever the source, you have an evacuation situation.  The one factor in your favor is that you may have a considerable amount to time in which to evacuate the occupants of your barn.
     You can help keep damages to a minimum by creating what wildland firefighters call defensible space.  This is an area, at least thirty feet wide, surrounding any buildings you need to protect in case firefighters can’t get to your property, or, if they can, they will have an open area around a building in which to work.  A steep slope will allow a fire to spread more rapidly than it will on flat land, so depending on your topography (are you on top of a hill, in a valley, on flatland?) you may need more defensible space around your buildings. Figure on thirty feet as the minimum, though.  When you pace it off you’ll see that you haven’t lost much valuable space considering the protection it offers.  Within the defensible space you must keep the grass below six inches in height, but your horses (or goats, cows, sheep) can take care of that for you since you can still use the area for a paddock.  If you have any low-growing plants in the area they should be fire-resistant.

The Importance of Timing

     Timing is important in evacuating from an encroaching wildland fire because you need to get your animals out before vehicular traffic slows down the process.  For example, if you have four horses to move and only have access to your own two-horse trailer, you will be moving two of your horses at a time and making two trips to do it.  You need adequate time to move the first two horses, go back home for the other two horses, and then make the second trip to safety successfully without being locked in a highway traffic jam of hundreds to thousands of people evacuating the endangered area. 
     Not only do you need enough time, you need to have enough fuel to make both trips without getting off a highway to refuel.  If traffic is beginning to build up, by the time you refuel, you may risk being stuck in a jam, and that’s time you don’t have—unless, of course, you began your evacuation at the first word of a threat.  Better to waste the fuel and time and not have had to evacuate at all, then to wait until the last minute and take your chances on reaching safety for yourself and your animals. 
     So, my main word on wildland fires comes down to this: you’d never forgive yourself if the two remaining horses in my example were yours and they perished because you didn’t foresee the traffic problems or realize just how fast a wildland fire can spread. 
     As a corollary to evacuation, practice loading your horses in a trailer (different kinds if you have them available) so they load without hesitation.  Plan more than one escape route, including one on foot in case your planned escape roads become impassable due to traffic jams, firefighting apparatus, or the fire.  If you are transporting (or in some instances having to turn your horses free to escape weather-related emergencies),  the best ID for your horse is a fetlock band with the horse’s name, your name, address and phone numbers.  A fetlock band is the preferred method because it won’t get lost, as a halter might.  Carry with you proof of ownership and identification on each horse, including a photo of you and your horse together.  Also, make sure your horses are current on vaccinations (tetanus, EEE, West Nile, rabies and flu/rhino in case you must evacuate your horses to a public holding area.  Make sure you have with you all medications your horses take.

CONTINUED

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