Drive around your neighborhood and look at it as a fire fighter might. Would your neighborhood be defensible if a wild fire threatened? Are you confident that fire fighters would have easy access into your area? Is your next door neighbor’s yard a threat to your own or is your yard a threat to his? If you ask yourself these questions now, and do something about the problems maybe you can minimize the fire threat when fire season does come along.
Do you know about your Kern River Valley Fire Safe Council? I just became a member of it last year. I had no idea, previously, of what this organization did for the community. It is a group of volunteers that write grants, and with the Forest Service, BLM, and Kern County Fire Department work to make the areas around our communities less hazardous. Look it up on the web. You might be surprised by all the Fuel Reduction Projects that have been done and are in the process right now.
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To organize a chipper day have a representative of your neighborhood get in touch with Don Davis and submit a Project Application with the list of neighbors that will participate. All the information is on the website. Please visit it at Kern River Valley Fire Safe Council.
They have all been working, behind the scenes, to make our area safer. It is your responsibility to make your own property safe. I know it’s early but we should all be aware of how to make sure our homes are as fire safe as possible.
“Living With Fire - A Guide for the Homeowner” might still be somewhere around your house. Thousands of these magazines were handed out last year. It’s full of helpful information about our area and our own Fire Safe Council.
Be safe, be aware.
Terry Bolt, member
Kern River Valley Fire Safe Council


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