by Mark | Jan 4, 2025 | Wildfire News
When a wildfire gets close, it doesn’t arrive as a polite line of flame. It throws heat, it throws embers, and it looks for anything dry and convenient to turn into the next ignition point. That’s why defensible space matters. You’re not prettying up a yard, you’re...
by Mark | Dec 11, 2024 | Wildfire News
Wildfires don’t wait for business hours. They jump canyons at midnight, run with the wind, and turn a quiet ridgeline into a problem in minutes. The only thing that consistently buys time is early intel—real signals, not rumors. That’s why the game has shifted from...
by Mark | Dec 4, 2024 | Wildfire News
Wildfire season isn’t a date on a calendar; it’s a mood. You feel it when the air gets sharp and the hills go quiet. In places that have been burned before, folks don’t wait around anymore. They organize. They walk their streets together and point at the obvious...
by Mark | Nov 13, 2024 | Wildfire News
When a wildfire moves into the zone, embers are often the silent messengers of destruction long before a flame front shows up. They ride the wind, settle into roof valleys, cling under eaves or gather in dry debris pockets near siding. That’s the real danger—the...
by Mark | Nov 9, 2024 | Wildfire News
Over the last few decades, wildfires have started acting differently. They’re igniting earlier in the season, lasting longer, reaching further into neighborhoods that used to feel safe, and coming in with more heat and intensity than ever before. Those changes aren’t...
by Mark | Nov 6, 2024 | Wildfire News
Wildfire season isn’t a calendar event anymore, it’s evolving in ways that demand more than the old “clean-up the yard and hope for the best” approach. If you’re living in a fire-prone area and are considering protection systems, it’s better to understand what real...