Mitigation & Maintenance · Cal Wildfire Defense

Defensible Space Clearing

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This is not brush clearing. This is fire defense.

Defensible Space Clearing is fire-informed vegetation management across all three of your defensible space zones — scoped against your property’s actual fire risk and executed to the standard that makes the difference between a property that looks cleared and one that genuinely is.

A regular clearing crew removes vegetation. CWD removes the right vegetation.

On your specific property, with your specific terrain, fuel types, and fire approach direction — those are not the same thing. Here is what changes when the people doing the work understand fire behavior:

Fuel type drives every decision — not appearance

San Diego’s dominant fuels — chamise, manzanita, ceanothus chaparral — contain volatile oils that burn at extreme intensity. Ornamental junipers, common in residential landscaping, are among the most dangerous plants you can have near a structure. Eucalyptus generates firebrands that travel one to two miles under Santa Ana conditions. A regular crew cuts what’s there. CWD knows which fuels are the actual threat and works accordingly.

Ladder fuel removal is a targeted action — not incidental

Ladder fuels carry fire from the ground into the tree canopy, where it becomes a crown fire. Raising crown base height from four feet to twelve feet requires three to four times more surface fire intensity to initiate a crown fire. CWD removes ladder fuels deliberately and specifically. Most clearing crews remove them only when they happen to be in the way.

Plant spacing is calculated, not eyeballed

Zone 1 plant spacing interrupts horizontal fire spread. The standard is approximately twice the height of the shrub between plants — that spacing is what slows a surface fire moving through your Zone 1 toward your structure. CWD works to that formula. A generic crew works to what looks like enough.

Fire approach direction determines what gets priority

South and southwest-facing slopes in San Diego have the driest fuels and highest fire risk. The direction fire would most likely approach your structure — based on your terrain, your aspect, and Santa Ana wind patterns — determines which side of your property needs the most aggressive treatment. CWD evaluates this before a single cut is made.

Zone 0 is a different category of work entirely

Most homes lost in wildfires ignite not from direct flame contact but from embers landing in the immediate area surrounding the structure — under decks, in gutters, against fences, around vents. During red flag conditions in San Diego, the probability of ignition for debris in Zone 0 approaches 100 percent. Zone 0 clearing is not vegetation management — it is ember management. CWD treats it that way.

The threat doesn’t start at your property line.

Under Santa Ana conditions, embers travel ahead of the fire front — sometimes miles. Your property doesn’t need to be adjacent to active fire to be at risk from it. Zone 0 ember readiness is your last line of defense. It is also the most important single thing you can do.

For any property owner ready to do the work.

  • Residential and semi-rural property owners on lots from a quarter acre to five or more acres who need defensible space work done to a professional, fire-informed standard.
  • Customers who have completed a Property Fire Risk Walk and are ready to act on the findings — the Walk Summary becomes the scope brief for the crew.
  • Customers with a Defensible Space Plan who need it executed — the plan defines the zones, the crew executes to it.
  • Customers who need documented proof that the work was done — for insurance compliance or in response to a CAL FIRE notice.
  • Customers who have managed their own vegetation and want a professional team to do it right, document it, and tell them what to do going forward.
Every Defensible Space Clearing job requires a Property Fire Risk Walk before the crew day is scheduled. If you’ve already completed a walk, the crew works directly from your Walk Summary. If not, that’s where we start — call CWD to schedule your Risk Walk first.

Scoped before the first cut. Documented after the last one.

Step 1 — Scope

The crew works from your Property Fire Risk Walk Summary or Defensible Space Plan — the scope is confirmed before the crew day is ever booked. The Risk Walk is what tells us what your property needs, where the zone boundaries belong, which fuels are the priority, and what direction fire approaches from. Everything the crew does on job day flows from that.

Step 2 — Before documentation

Before photos are taken zone by zone before any vegetation is touched. This is the baseline record — what the property looked like before the work. Part of the completion documentation and a useful reference for any insurance or compliance conversation.

Step 3 — Execution

The crew works through the zones in order. Zone 0 first — every ember ignition pathway addressed, ground surface evaluated, under-deck and gutter conditions noted. Zone 1 managed to San Diego County’s 50-foot standard: grass to four inches, plant spacing established to the correct formula, ladder fuels eliminated, lower limbs cleared to six feet from the ground — ten feet on exposed slopes. Zone 2 managed for fuel spacing and dead material removal. Every decision made against fire behavior principles.

Step 4 — Completion

After photos taken zone by zone when the work is complete. CWD confirms all scoped work is done before the crew leaves. The completion report is produced and delivered — what was cleared, where, to what standard, any out-of-scope conditions observed, and what comes next.

The work done. The record produced.

Completed defensible space work

All three zones cleared to CWD’s fire-informed standard — Zone 0 ember-ready, Zone 1 managed to San Diego County’s 50-foot requirement with correct plant spacing and ladder fuels eliminated, Zone 2 fuel spacing established and dead material removed.

Before and after photo documentation

Organized by zone. A complete visual record of the property before and after — useful for insurance documentation, CAL FIRE compliance conversations, and your own records.

Completion report

A written summary covering scope, zones addressed, work completed per zone, any out-of-scope conditions observed, and recommended next steps. Delivered within 48 hours of job completion.

Clearing vegetation is the work. Documenting it is what makes the work defensible — in an insurance conversation, a CAL FIRE response, or as a baseline for everything that comes next. CWD’s completion report gives you that record: scope, zones, standard, date, before and after photography.

The clearing is done. Here’s what builds on it.

Defensible Space Plan

The clearing is done — now document it formally. A Defensible Space Plan produces the written plan and custom zone map that defines your property’s fire defense strategy as a permanent record.

Learn more →

Fire Season Maintenance Program

Defensible space is a condition, not a project. The maintenance program keeps your property ready through every fire season — managed, documented, and never scrambled for at the last minute.

Learn more →

Full Property Fuel Management

If your property has significant acreage beyond the standard defensible space zones, Full Property Fuel Management extends the work across the full property — multi-day, full scope, complete documentation.

Learn more →

Ready to get your property cleared the right way?

Call CWD to discuss your property and get a quote for Defensible Space Clearing. We’ll talk through what you have, what needs to happen, and what it will take.

Call CWD for a Quote → 619-949-3814 Not ready to call? Reach us by email or through our contact page → Want to understand the terminology first? Visit our Wildfire Education site →