Will your House Survive? This calculator is based solely on research into house losses that occurred during the 1983 Ash Wednesday fire at Mount Macedon, Victoria. It is for houses exposed to a forest fire which is driven by strong winds on a very hot day i.e. extreme fire weather conditions. In a forest, assume the calculator maybe in error by +or- 15%. In grassland or other fuel types it should be useful but less accurate.
Fire Intensity
Is the most important factor which determines house survival. Intensity can be reduced by decreasing the available FUEL on the ground within at least 40 metres of the house.
Trees
Near a house they increase the hazard by a small amount, if however the fuel load on the ground is reduced then trees can be retained.
Fuel Load
To measure fuel load measure a 1 metre by 1 metre square on the ground. Collect all the dead fuel that is thinner than a pencil and weigh it. Divide this weight by 100 and you have the fuel load in tonnes/hectare.
For accurate results obtain several samples around the house and average the values.
Attendance
During a fire it is important for house survival. Well prepared people who stay at a properly prepared house throughout a fire can extinguish small fires and thereby stop a house from burning down. Evacuations just before a fire arrives are risky. A house or similar building is usually the safest refuge during a fire since it will protect you from the radiant heat of the fire.