Larry -
A few years ago I was, ironically, up at the property when I saw on TV that a giant firestorm was raging in the San Francisco east bay area. I about freaked when I saw arial footage of helicopters hauling huge buckets of water over the hills
near my house! /w3tcompact/icons/shocked.gif
That was the now famous Oakland Hills firestorm that wiped out a substantial number of luxury homes, apartment buildings and many, many acres of grass and timber. My sister-in-law had just moved out of a fancy 100+ units apartment complex just
two weeks before it was reduced to a pile of ash. The fire never got to my side of the hill, but that didn't stop me from being a tad traumatized anyway. /w3tcompact/icons/frown.gif
It seems like southern Cal has a firestorm just about every year. They get hellacious winds across their dry hills late in the summer, which is a good recipe for disaster.
I'm also told that about 10 years before my parents bought what is now my "tractor property" up in the foothills (that would make it about 1964), the whole area was wiped out by a forest fire. Although the signs remained for quite a while, it's amazing how much recovery ol' mother nature can cough up in 10 years.
Last year my own acreage was set afire by a well-meaning neighbor who mowed the tall grass around the mailbox cluster nearby. His mower threw a spark which went unnoticed until a passerby saw the flames. I posted
that story a while back.
<font color=blue>Taking special precautions?</font color=blue>
I've made it my mission to keep the tall grasses under control, maintain firebreaks all around the structures and then some, and to re-open the fire roads. I spent many a weekend last couple of years busting my hump with a backpack sprayer, a DR Trimmer/Mower and an assortment of hand tools. It was a losing battle, but I now think I have solved the problem --
I bought a tractor!!! /w3tcompact/icons/laugh.gif