
June in Northern California has a rhythm to it. School lets out, the foothills turn gold, and that first stretch of triple-digit afternoons rolls in. It's also the unofficial start of fire season — and for homeowners from Oroville to Paradise to Redding, it's the month to take a hard look at the space around the house.
Most of us think about defensible space purely in terms of wildfire. That's the headline, and it matters. But here's something we've learned across 30+ years of caring for NorCal yards: the same overgrowth that feeds a fire also gives pests a place to live. Clear it out, and you protect your home on two fronts at once.
Here's how to make your June yard work do double duty — and where a little help can give you real peace of mind.
What Is Defensible Space?
Defensible space is the buffer you create around your home by managing vegetation, debris, and other fuel. In California, it's required under Public Resources Code 4291 for properties in State Responsibility Areas and Very High Fire Hazard Severity Zones — which covers much of the NorCal foothills and communities like Paradise and the hills above Oroville and Chico. The goal is simple: slow a fire down, cut down on flying embers, and give firefighters a safer place to defend your home.
The Three Zones — and What June Maintenance Looks Like
CAL FIRE breaks defensible space into three zones, each working a little closer to your home than the last.
- Zone 0 — the first 5 feet (the "ember-resistant zone"): The newest and most important zone. Because wind-driven embers cause most home ignitions, keep this strip clear of dead leaves and pine needles, move woodpiles and stored items away from the walls, and trade flammable bark mulch for gravel or stone. Statewide rules here are still being finalized, but it's the highest-value place to start.
- Zone 1 — 5 to 30 feet: Remove dead plants and fallen leaves, keep the grass short, space out shrubs, and clear anything flammable from under decks and stairs.
- Zone 2 — 30 to 100 feet: Mow grass to a maximum of 4 inches, create horizontal spacing between trees and shrubs, prune low branches, clear dead vegetation, and keep 10 feet of clearance around sheds and propane tanks.
The Hidden Connection: Overgrown Yards Are Pest Magnets
Here's where pest control and fire prep overlap. The tall grass, brush piles, and dense shrubs that carry a fire are the exact places pests want to be.
- Rodents nest in woodpiles, ivy, and tall grass right against the foundation — then look for a way indoors. (It's the same pattern we covered in why rodent problems spike in summer.)
- Ticks and fleas thrive along shady, overgrown edges where pets and wildlife pass through.
- Snakes follow the rodents into that cover, and into your yard.
- Wasps and yellowjackets build nests in undisturbed brush and ground litter.
When you pull fuel away from the house, you're also pulling away the food, water, and shelter pests depend on. It's the same Integrated Pest Management (IPM) thinking we bring to every property: change the conditions and you solve the problem at its source — with fewer treatments and less reliance on chemicals.
Your June Defensible Space & Pest-Prevention Checklist
Most of this is a weekend's work. Here's the order we'd tackle it in:
- Clear the first 5 feet. Rake up dead leaves and needles against the house, move woodpiles and stored items away from the walls, and swap bark mulch near the foundation for gravel or stone.
- Cut the grass and weeds. Mow to 4 inches or shorter, and pull weeds before they dry out and go to seed.
- Trim back the green. Put space between shrubs and trees, and prune low branches so a ground fire can't climb into the canopy.
- Haul out the clutter. Brush piles, leaf litter, and overgrown ground cover are prime real estate for rodents and snakes.
- Inspect the foundation. While you're down low, look for gaps and cracks where rodents could slip inside — and seal them up.
- Mind the trees. Stressed or dead trees are both a fire hazard and a magnet for wood-boring insects, so keep an eye on their health.
When to Call in the Pros
A weekend covers a lot of ground, but some jobs are bigger — or riskier — than a Saturday. That's where we come in.
At Hunters Services, our weed abatement keeps large or hard-to-reach properties clear and compliant through fire season. Our tree care helps keep your trees healthy and ember-resistant. And if all that cleared brush has already nudged rodents toward your home, our exclusion-focused rodent control seals them out. Each one starts with a free, no-pressure look at your property.
We're California natives ourselves, and we've seen what fire can do to the places we love. Helping you protect your home — and the family inside it — is the work we're proud to do.
Ready to get your yard fire- and pest-ready? Call us at (530) 342-8950 or request your free estimate today.