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Mulch

Mulch

Mulch plays an important role in your landscapes. Proper mulch application provides benefits to water retention, soil temperature, weed inhibition, and soil erosion. These qualities can help reduce fuel risk in fire prone areas, but also introduces a new combustible material into your landscape. For this reason, it is important to consider the typelocation, and quantity of mulch used.

Recommendations

Maintaining noncombustible, ignition–resistant areas immediately adjacent to structures is particularly important. Embers often accumulate adjacent to structures, providing an ignition source for combustible materials.

For areas less than five feet away from structures, noncombustible rock, gravel, concrete and pavers should be used. Live plants, even when irrigated, are not recommended.

For areas between five and thirty feet of structures, large bark nuggets and composted wood chips may be used in small batches. Since these materials are combustible and will transmit fire across an area, do not use them in a widespread or continuous manner. Within this perimeter, alternate areas between bark and noncombustible materials such as concrete, gravel, rock and lawn.

Spray–on fire retardants are typically only effective at suppressing fire spread for 5 - 10 minutes. Water soluble fire retardants are also at risk of losing their effectiveness due to precipitation or irrigation of mulch material.

Irrigating wood and bark mulches, should not be relied upon to lessen fire hazard. Irrigation does reduce the ignitability of mulches, but water supply and pressure may be limited or unavailable during a wildfire. Furthermore, the dry, hot and windy weather seen during wildfires will dry out the mulch bed well in advance of the flaming front.

Material options

Composted Wood Chips under 3 inches in size, should be applied 2-4 inches deep. This material has low burn characteristics, but may smolder. Smoldering combustion produced by this mulch treatment may not be readily noticeable during a wildfire event and may go undetected by firefighters.

Rice Straw or Coconut Fiber mulches are often the most effective treatment to protect gentle slopes from erosion. Find more information about installing post fire erosion control here.

Shredded RubberPine Needles and Shredded Cedar Bark have among the highest hazardous combustion characteristics and are recommended for use only in areas more than 30 feet from the house. Although shredded rubber is not a natural woody mulch, it is still flammable and will smolder and flame. It should be limited to use under play equipment and more than 30 feet from structures. 

Paving StonesGravel, and Decomposed Granite are non-combustible and should be used within 5 feet of the home, along pathways, and to segment patches of combustible vegetation.