Bushfire Tips

Getting your home bushfire ready

If you're not prepared for the bushfire season that brutal Australian summers can often bring with them, it’s time to put a few precautions in place.

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If you’re like 53 per cent of the population and you’ve not yet prepared your home for the bushfire season that brutal Australian summers can often bring with them, it’s time to put a few precautions in place.

Even those in metro areas who live close to national parks or large areas of bushland are not immune to the threat. Rather than think you’re safe and regret not taking steps later, here are five simple steps you can take to start to protect your home.

“Preparing your home before a threat makes it easier to defend, helps firefighters and is less likely to put neighbours’ homes at risk as well,” says ServiceSeeking.com.au CEO Jeremy Levitt.

Obviously, advice from your local fire service should be followed if you find yourself in very near proximity to a blaze at any time.”

In the lead-up, however, you can:

Get out of the gutter

If you haven’t already, clearing your home’s guttering of leaves and twigs is a great place to start. Those autumn leaves dried out by summer’s already intense heat are easily set alight by embers or fire. So don’t take the risk and clear them all away now.

Mow it down

Keep your lawns short and gardens maintained. Not just because it looks better but because it provides less fuel for any fires heading your way. Cut back trees and shrubs close to your dwelling and clear debris, leaves and twigs that may have fallen around your home regularly. It is recommended you keep a 20-metre perimeter clear zone.

Raise the roof

Most of us don’t think about our roof until we spring a leak, or in the case of summer, any damage can have devastating effects in the wake of a fire. A cracked or missing roof tile could allow an ember to get into your roofline, making it much harder to protect your home.

Ensure it’s insured

It’s too late to discover your home and contents insurance isn’t adequate, or you failed to take it out in the first place after a bushfires decimates your home. If you’re not sure of the status or level of coverage of your insurance, speak to your insurer for peace of mind. If you’re in a particularly bushfire-prone region, ensure you have adequate fire insurance in place. And if the premium seems too high, then shop around rather than cutting it out altogether.

Water-wise

And lastly, in keeping with the friendly neighbourly spirit – if you have a pool, tank or dam, the NSW Rural Fire Service encourages you to put a Static Water Supply sign on your property entrance so firefighters know they access water.

Be safe this summer. If you need help clearing your gutters, cutting down overgrown vegetation or checking your roof, post your job on ServiceSeeking.com.au.
Jobs website ServiceSeeking.com.au is the place to go when you’re looking to get any job done around your home with everything from tradies to accountants, cleaners, removalists and photographers.

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