Sparking Action! fire education event returns to ScienceWorks

Eiger Baylog speaks with her mom, Kara Baylog, a forestry and natural resources coordinator for the Oregon State University Extension Service, at the Sparking Action! fire education event, held Saturday at ScienceWorks Hands-On Museum. Ashland.news photo by Ryan Pfeil
May 11, 2025

Multiple exhibits, booths and demonstrations popped up at Saturday event designed to inspire people to safeguard their homes

By Ryan Pfeil, Ashland.news

Ask 8-year-old Eiger Baylog a question about defensible space, and chances are she’ll know the answer.

Here’s her summary about the basic concept: “Basically, defensible space is where you have your house, but you make sure that there’s no fuel around it that’s super close.”

Nailed it.

Best practices for defensible space was just one of many points of education attendees could glean at Sparking Action!, an event dedicated to preparing for wildfires by teaching attendees how to take steps such as clearing fuels around their property, having an escape plan and packing an emergency go bag. The second annual event, put on by the Southern Oregon Forest Restoration Collaborative, ScienceWorks Hands-On Museum, the city of Ashland and the Lomakatsi Restoration Project, ran from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday, May 10, at ScienceWorks.

Event offerings included live fire demonstrations, activities for children and informational booths from nearly 20 area organizations such as SOFRC and Ashland Fire & Rescue.

Attendees also had the option to learn about the cultural use of fire, watch the educational film “Fire Lines,” learn about student-helmed service projects, and build a do-it-yourself air filter to take home.

”We’re doing really hands-on things,” said Amelia Liberatore, SOFRC communications officer.

Model homes, real flames

In one hands-on demonstration, dozens of participants constructed small models intended to simulate landscapes and neighborhoods. Adults and children took aluminum baking trays, filled them with sand, then installed matches, intended to mimic trees. Demonstration leaders sprinkled in some cedar wood chips, intended to represent understory fuels such as bushes. Small paper boxes represented homes. Then, lit matches sparked fires on the miniature worlds to show how the resulting flames behaved.

Attendees of a live fire demonstration got to make models of neighborhoods and terrain that were later set on fire to show how fire behaves in various environments and the importance of defensible space. Photo courtesy of Amelia Liberatore

“We asked the families — you know, there are some very young kids doing this activity — and we asked them to make sure the home is protected,” Liberatore said. “And so, they’re lining it with water. They had a spray bottle, and they’re putting water around the house. They’re putting the trees all over to one side. So you get to see defensible space is a very important part of protecting our home and being knowledgeable and proactive about wildfire.”

Teresa Vonn, a fire risk reduction specialist with the Oregon State Fire Marshal, had a similar exhibit at her booth. She displayed a model-sized house divided into three sections displaying poor, moderate, and best setups for preparing a home for fire.

Teresa Vonn, a fire risk specialist with the Oregon State Fire Marshal, discusses best and worst practices for preparing your home against fire. Ashland.news photo by Ryan Pfeil

The ill-prepared section included a combustible wooden fence touching the home, for example, while the well-prepared one had a noncombustible metal fence within 5 feet of the structure.

Fire as the predator

Think “The Three Little Pigs” story, but the wolf is a fire.

“That’s the idea of this house: kind of showing worst to best examples of what we can do,” Vonn said.

Education meshed well with fun. One event booth featured a fishing game, and art stations were available inside ScienceWorks, too.

Michael Farkas helps Evie Farkas with a fishing game as Poppy Farkas looks on. Ashland.news photo by Ryan Pfeil

“There’s this thing where you can get samples,” Eiger said. “I went there, too. The samples there are freeze-dried, and they’re very delicious.”

Learning about fire in a community-based environment is a positive way to prepare for the real thing, Liberatore said.

It’s a key purpose Sparking Action! and similar events, said Jennifer Payne, SOFRC education program director. Proactive steps such as preparing defensible space around your home, putting a go bag together or signing up for Jackson Alerts don’t have to be scary if communities prepare together. We can adapt to fire, Payne said. It’s a cultural shift, but it can be done.

“If we can make it part of our community, part of our daily life, and something that we’re all doing together, then that is the trauma-informed approach,” Payne said. “Supporting people to be prepared psychologically, emotionally, physically.”

Email Ashland.news web editor Ryan Pfeil at [email protected].

Picture of Ryan

Ryan

Related Posts...

Our Sponsors

Latest posts

Letter: Say no to war against Iran

John Marciano and Leslie Dwyer: Benjamin Netanyahu, the genocidal war criminal, just met with President Donald Trump, urging Trump to join a war against Iran. This would be an unfounded, unjust war that is clearly against international law and the U.S. Constitution.

Read More >

BLM seeks summer artist-in-residence applicants

Bureau of Land Management (BLM) officials are accepting applications for the agency’s annual summer artist-in-residence programs: one at the historic Rogue River Ranch National Historic Site and another at the Cascade-Siskiyou National Monument. The artists will have the opportunity to capture these lands during a milestone year.

Read More >

Our Sponsors

Explore More...

Tom Dimitre: Make it a requirement that any city official who can propose fee increases be required to live in the city.
John Marciano and Leslie Dwyer: Benjamin Netanyahu, the genocidal war criminal, just met with President Donald Trump, urging Trump to join a war against Iran. This would be an unfounded, unjust war that is clearly against international law and the U.S. Constitution.
This bonus acrostic contains a quote from a philosopher about learning. Solve it in your browser or download and print; how to solve acrostics. Next Friday's crossword: CrosspOLLInation 2026 Spring #01. Check out the Mini crossword on Tuesdays.
Ashland Planning Commission Chair Lisa Verner cast the deciding vote to partially approve, partially deny a housing project at 431 N. Main St., at the prominent corner of N. Main and Nursery Streets in the city’s nationally registered Skidmore Academy Historic District in a dramatic ending to the meeting of Tuesday, Feb. 10.
Bureau of Land Management (BLM) officials are accepting applications for the agency’s annual summer artist-in-residence programs: one at the historic Rogue River Ranch National Historic Site and another at the Cascade-Siskiyou National Monument. The artists will have the opportunity to capture these lands during a milestone year.

Don't Miss Our Top Stories

Get our newsletter delivered to your inbox three times a week.
It’s FREE and you can cancel anytime.

ashland.news logo

Subscribe to the newsletter and get local news sent directly to your inbox.

(It’s free)