NZ Lifestyle Block

Light your fire (safely and courteousl­y)

10 tips for using

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Ilove fire. If I could, I would be a pryrotechn­ic engineer, someone who makes big fireworks that explode in time to music.

Since that opportunit­y isn’t likely to come my way I have had to console myself with fire. An open fire has always been a part of my life and adds a lot more than just heat to my home.

Scrub fires are much more fun, and a very effective, organic means of controllin­g large areas of noxious weeds to a level where they are more easily eliminated.

Of course, bush fires can get out of control and cause serious damage. Use some fire sense if you are going to burn outside this summer.

The best time to burn plants is when they are dry, usually in late summer. Unfortunat­ely, the easiest time for a fire to get out of control is when all the surrounds are dry, usually in late summer.

It’s a catch-22. You have to weigh up the flammabili­ty of your intended burn with the flammabili­ty of its surrounds.

If you can get in and slash or crush some of the weeds beforehand so they dry out, you can get most plant material to burn, even in winter. But unless you have very dry conditions, you probably won’t get as clean a burn.

My preferred strategy in the Waikato is to leave the intended slash to dry over summer, then light it after the first few rains of autumn have made the surrounds less flammable.

Check several different weather forecasts on the day. Wind is the most important factor. Delay if there is anything above a slight breeze. A rain forecast for the evening or following day is great as it will dampen any embers and stop flare-ups. Most regions of NZ have restricted fire seasons or fire bans throughout the summer. Checking and getting the relevant permit is free and painless in my area – I just fill in a form online – and it is worth doing even for the smallest fire. If an illegal fire gets out of control, you are up the proverbial ... creek.

More importantl­y, when you get a permit, your local fire brigade is notified. Ours are all volunteers who give up their time to keep our community safe and I don’t want to waste their efforts by having them respond to my bonfire. If someone does call them (and many people do, without checking the situation first) and you don’t have a permit, the fire brigade will put it out and you will be left with a half-burnt, sodden mess to deal with.

Contact your local council to see what the rules are in your area.

Talk to your local fire brigade too. They will appreciate knowing your plan. Our volunteer brigade were happy to burn a dangerous pile close to buildings on their training night. We showed our appreciati­on with a donation, so it was a win/win for all. Have fire control organised BEFORE you light a match. We have a 200-litre sprayer and the neighbour has a bigger one on his tractor. We have them hooked up, full of water, engines running and out of the shed, ready to go. You could also join garden hoses together and attach nozzles and check your tanks have sufficient water. We also have several fire extinguish­ers in permanent positions around our house and workshops and ensure they are serviced annually and always accessible.

For one fire, I set out buckets full of water with old woollen blankets and jute sacks soaking in them every 10 metres or so along a danger area. They saved the day in the end.

When things go bad, you don’t have time to muck around. The five minutes it takes to get things organised can make all the difference between the fire that almost got away and the one that did.

Smoke travels a long way and it will affect your neighbours. It doesn’t take much to give them a call or drop a note into their letterbox so they can close windows, bring the washing in and check animals are not panicking. It’s courteous and fosters good relations.

Check their paddocks, particular­ly if they’re upwind of you. If they have some dry hay almost ready to cut, even on the far side of a shelter belt, it is not a good time to burn. Sparks fly and dry grass is extremely flammable. Delay your burn until it is cut and harvested. Fire travels. While you may think it is going to go one way, it can easily go another. The most interestin­g fire I was involved in fighting (not one I lit!) was in the Australian outback. We fought it for four days before we gave up. We bulldozed and back-burnt a fire break instead. It was only when it reached the break that it burnt itself out.

Clear all the boundaries of your fire of anything burnable. This needs to be at least a metre for a ground fire, more if you’re burning bushes or trees.

Bulldozing a break is ideal, but since most of us don’t have one on hand, clear shrubs, rake up pine needles, mow grass short (with a catcher) and, if feasible, soak the ground with water.

The bigger the fire and the dryer the surrounds, the wider and cleaner the break needs to be. A break is not fail-safe – a fire can jump and sparks will fly – but it definitely helps.

Note that gum trees and pine trees (even live ones) are particular­ly flammable so clear a wide margin around them, or think again if fire is your best method. Think about how you are going to light it, and make sure everyone involved knows the plan. Fire burns upwards. If you are lighting the side of a gully and light it at the base, it will roar up. This is good if you are burning green matter and have people, water and a firebreak at the top.

But it is bad if you are burning dry matter and have flammables over the ridge. In that case you want to start at the top, and burn a more controlled, smaller fire that will gradually edge its way down.

Don’t light everything at once. A fire roars (usually for less than 20 minutes), then settles. If you have a big area to burn, be patient and let one bit catch, do its thing, then settle, before you move onto the next. I once lit seven big piles of slash in a gully at the same time. Let’s just say the resulting fire turbulence made fireworks look tame and I didn’t need any music to accompany it.

Always make sure everyone always has a clear escape route as it is surprising­ly easy to find yourself encircled in flames. If you are working in a team, caution everyone to watch others and not to get ahead. Newspaper and a packet of matches is adequate for many fires. Old oil or diesel dribbled around the start line can help green matter burn. NEVER use petrol as it and its fumes are extremely flammable and very dangerous.

A gas flame-thrower is my husband’s choice but it is cumbersome for me to lug around steep hillsides.

I prefer a chunk of pumice wired onto a long, No 8 wire ‘handle’, soaked in kerosene. This will light with a lighter and is easy to thrust deep into a blackberry bush, where the dead matter is, to get things started.

Take a cut-down milk bottle of kerosene with you to keep the pumice in (it will self-extinguish) and you can re-use it all day.

Guy Fawkes is at a stupid time of year. The weather is unreliable, the wood is wet and days are already lengthenin­g. And it has little to do with NZ anyway. It’s more fun to celebrate in autumn after the first rains and invite friends for a bonfire of prunings.

Rather than lighting a big bonfire in one dangerous rush of flames, create two. Light the one upwind first and delegate anyone keen (in my case, teenage boys) to keep feeding it with a few branches at a time. It keeps them busy and happy, keeps the fire under control, tires them out, and you can relax with a glass of wine.

Make sure there are plenty of marshmallo­ws, chocolate thin biscuits (to sandwich the marshmallo­ws between), sausages and long sticks.

Unless you manage to burn extremely hot (100°C+) for at least 15 minutes, a scrub fire is going to clear the top growth, but not kill the roots or seeds. Gorse, blackberry, boxthorn and even pigfern will quickly regrow.

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