FIRE

Heartbeat of Earth.

 

 

 

 

Flip the Script
Four Lessons on Fire in Southern California

A new report by the Robert Redford Conservancy presents new visualizations for understanding worsening fire patterns in California, asks how fire hazard zones can become assets, and pushes the envelope on land-based conservation and fire preparedness by enhancing biodiversity and building the green economy at the same time.

Note: This is not an accessible version of this report. If you would like an accessible version, please contact us at rrc@pitzer.edu.

Being informed is the key to being prepared.

The dashboards below present different approaches to the issue of fire.

The first tab answers these questions:

  • Am I in a High or Very High Fire Severity Zone?
  • Do I live in the Wildland Urban Interface? What is that? How many people live in the WUI in my town? In my region?
  • How many fires have burned in the past and where?

Search your address, and zoom into areas of interest to find out more.

CLICK THROUGH THE TABS ABOVE to find out more about wildfire in urban areas and creating a fire-positive future.

California Fire Patterns, 1950-2025

Fire in California is beginning to move toward a continual state of fire. Note the regularity of California's overall pattern and its projected, exponential increase.

https://claremont.maps.arcgis.com/apps/instant/media/index.html?appid=6947fafbd3564baab359514b899f3f7b

Key Terms

Fire terms to know:

  • Wildland Urban Interface (WUI): Areas where human development meets or intermingles with undeveloped wildland vegetation. This increases fire risk.

  • Fire Severity Zone: A classification used to assess the likelihood and potential intensity of fires in specific areas. California designates zones as Moderate, High, or Very High Fire Hazard Severity Zones (FHSZ). You may be locked out of traditional homeowners insurance.

  • Defensible Space: A buffer zone around structures where vegetation and flammable materials are managed to reduce fire spread and improve firefighter safety. California law requires specific defensible space measures (e.g., 100 feet around homes in high-risk areas).

  • Prescribed Burn: A controlled fire intentionally set by professionals to reduce hazardous fuels, improve ecosystem health, and mitigate future wildfire risk.

  • Firebreak: A gap in vegetation or other flammable material designed to slow or stop the spread of fire. Firebreaks can be natural (e.g., rivers) or human-made (e.g., cleared land, trails, farmland--even freeways).

  • Red Flag Warning: A weather alert issued by the National Weather Service indicating extreme fire conditions, such as strong winds, low humidity, and dry fuels.

  • Santa Ana Winds: Strong, dry winds that originate inland and move toward coastal Southern California, increasing wildfire risk by rapidly spreading flames. Similar conditions exist in Northern California, known as Diablo Winds.

  • Megafire: A wildfire that burns more than 100,000 acres, often causing extensive damage and lasting for weeks or months.

  • Fire-adapted Ecosystem: An ecosystem that has evolved to withstand and even benefit from periodic fire. Many California plant species rely on fire for regeneration.

  • Ember Storm: A phenomenon in which wind-driven embers travel ahead of the fire front, igniting spot fires and causing rapid fire spread, especially in WUI areas. The Eaton and Palisades fires stemmed from an ember storm.

Since 2003, California has had

 

Nineteen of the twenty largest fires.

 

Eighteen of the twenty most destructive fires.

Thirteen of the twenty deadliest fires.

And since 2025, two of the deadliest wildfires in Southern California history.

Suggested Reading

Burn Scars by Char Miller Book Cover

New edited volume on fire management and cultural significance.

The Pyrocene by Stephen J. Pyne Book Cover

Critical reading for the age of fire.

Insurance Agent standing in the rain as illustration of Climate Sentinels

Climate Sentinels StoryMap: Your Local Insurance Agent

SoCal Earth Storymap of Heat and Fire Screenshot

SoCal Earth StoryMap about Heat and Fire.

SoCal Fire Resources

The Los Angeles wildfires of 2025 have caused widespread devastation, displacing families, damaging property, and impacting local communities. SoCal Earth has compiled a list of resources, data layers, and statistics to assist fire victims and the community.

Websites

UCANR Master Gardeners Post Fire Information

Theodore Payne Foundation - Ecological Landscaping for Wildfire Resilience

Cal Fire

Home Hardening https://www.rcdsmm.org/wildfire-defense-videos/

Sustainable Defensible Space - defensiblespace.org -  Eco-appropriate Homescaping for Wildfire Resilience

California Fire History - https://projects.capradio.org/california-fire-history/#6/38.58/-121.49

The California Chaparral Institute - https://www.californiachaparral.org/

California Native Plant Society - Fire Recovery Guide

United States Green Building Council - https://usgbc-ca.org/programs/wildfire-defense-education-and-tours/ Association of Professional Landscape Designers

American Society of Landscape Architects - https://www.asla.org/fire.aspx

Mutual Aid LA Network - Resource List for Windstorms and Fire

Community Organizing - California Fire Safe Councils

Wildfire Risk - wildfirerisk.org -  Search your risk by state, county, tribal area, city

Books:

Firescaping Your Home: A Manual for Readiness in Wildfire Country, https://store.theodorepayne.org/products/firescaping-your-home-a-manual-for-readiness-in-wildfire-country?_pos=1&_sid=2ab836881&_ss=r

Fire Ecology, The State of Fire, Obi Kaufmann, https://store.theodorepayne.org/products/the-state-of-fire?_pos=1&_sid=59aff9a00&_ss=r

Firescaping: Protecting Your Home with a Fire-Resistant Landscape, 2nd Edition - https://store.theodorepayne.org/products/firescaping-protecting-your-home-with-a-fire-resis?_pos=2&_sid=2ab836881&_ss=r

Playbook for the Pyrocene - https://www.swagroup.com/stories/playbook-for-the-pyrocene

 

Thank you to Erik Blank, horticultural educator from the Theodore Payne Foundation for compiling these resources. This is a non-exhaustive list that we will continue to update.