Hi Fireshed Members,
‘Tis the season for informational webinars about wildfire adaptation. Grab your favorite snack, send the link to a neighbor or colleague who might share your enthusiasm, and tune in to these great informational sessions to get ideas about how you can take action in your community this upcoming Spring.
This week’s edition of Wildfire Wednesday features:
Chipping Best Practices Webinar tomorrow, December 10th
A Wildfire Home Retrofit Workshop for fire professionals and educators (community leaders)
East Jemez Landscape Futures: A collaborative approach to post-fire
Stay safe,
Gabe
Chipping Best Practices Webinar Tomorrow!
1 PM MST on December 10
Join wildland mitigation subject matter expert Jeremy Taylor and RSG! Program staff for a Best Practices Webinar on Chipping Programs.
Click here for webinar registration.
We’ll cover:
Considerations when launching a chipper program
Promoting the program/engaging the community to participate
Operational considerations
Funding opportunities/mechanisms
We also will be introducing a new opportunity available to program members to support chipping programs in their response area.
A Wildfire Home Retrofit Workshop for fire professionals and educators
December 15th, at 10am MST
For the full agenda, and to register, click here.
Fire professionals and educators are invited to join our FREE virtual Wildfire Home Retrofit Workshop. Please share this invitation with your peers or other fire professionals and educators you know.
During this interactive workshop, attendees will learn:
How homes are threatened during a wildfire
How to identify a home’s ember vulnerabilities and prioritize retrofits based on cost, effort and location scenarios
How to effectively communicate home hardening techniques to homeowners throughout the U.S.
There will be opportunities to share ideas, experiences and best practices as well as opportunities to ask questions during multiple Q&A sessions.
East Jemez Landscape Futures: A collaborative approach to post-fire
December 15th, 12pm MST
The East Jemez Landscape Futures (EJLF) project is a collaborative, landscape-scale approach to help guide future planning and research efforts in the severely altered landscapes of the eastern Jemez Mountains. EJLF seeks to address uncertainty by building a network of land managers, scientists, artists, NGOs and interested community members to inform future management, identify research needs, and capture stories from individuals and communities who were affected by these changes.
This webinar will share the EJLF experience and lessons learned responding to the complex questions of post-fire landscapes. Hosted by the Burned Area Learning Network and the Southwest Fire Science Consortium
Presenters: Colin Haffey, Sasha Stortz, and Savannah Lehnert