Douglas County community builds around wildfire prevention
DOUGLAS COUNTY, Colo. (KDVR) — Dry, windy weather is just one reason a new community near Chatfield State Park is being built around wildfire prevention.
The Sterling Ranch community sits about a half hour away from Denver in Douglas County.
View the latest Weather Alerts in Denver and across Colorado on FOX31
'It was originally a cattle ranch,' Sterling Ranch Founder Harold Smethills said. 'It was the Sterling family Ranch that started in the 1860s.'
Today, Harold and his wife Diane are developing a community that's three and a half miles long, two miles wide, with a focus on Western lifestyle and fire prevention.
'Our family is third-generation Coloradans, Colorado has wildfires,' Smethills said. 'The best way to prevent a fire wildfire isn't to fight. It is to prevent it in the first place.'
Cattle are one part of fire prevention for the community.
'We have about 150 head out here right now, and these cows will move around,' Sterling Ranch Community Authority Board General Manager Gary Debus said. 'They've got several ways that they process the feed and the forage, including their hoof prints in the soil, that they catch little droplets of water, you know, instead of having a runoff.'
Next, more than three million gallons of water are stored in water tanks on the Sterling Ranch property.
Hot spring weather raises concerns about Colorado's fire danger
'So over here you see a tank, there's 1.2 million gallons in that tank and there's a bigger one twice that size,' Smethills pointed out. 'So, if there were a fire, we can deliver at least a million gallons immediately to fight it.'
Jessica Gottschalk, director of resident support for Sterling Ranch, told FOX31 that walking trails and paths have six-foot beauty bands designed to help prevent fire spread. She says they hold landscape classes for those who build in the community to educate residents on fire-preventative landscaping options.
'It's the plant material, it's the fencing,' Gottschalk said. 'We require concrete split rail-fencing on the perimeters of the houses so you don't have that match stick fire effect.'
Sterling Ranch residents are also told to prepare, in part, by knowing what to take with them if they ever had to evacuate their homes. They call it the six Ps of evacuation:
People and pets
Prescriptions, vitamins and eyeglasses
Papers, phone numbers and important documents
Personal computers, hard drives and disks
Priceless items, pictures, keepsakes
'Plastic' (credit card, ATM card) and cash
All Colorado homeowners need to be fire-ready and fire-weather-aware.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
3 hours ago
- Yahoo
Water activities restricted on Clear Creek temporarily due to safety concerns
DENVER (KDVR) — Water activities like swimming and tubing are temporarily prohibited on Clear Creek in Jefferson County due to risks and safety concerns. The Jefferson County Sheriff's Office announced that waterway activity restrictions will go into effect at noon on Monday and will remain in place until water levels lower. Denver could reach 90 degrees later this week. Is that normal? Water height and flows are expected to rise as the snowpack continues to melt amid warmer temperatures in the coming days, prompting the limitations, according to the sheriff's office. Clear Creek is a Type IV water area, meaning there is increased public risk due to water temperature, blasted rock, undercut rocks, potential strainers and other safety concerns. The City of Golden shared this photo of conditions on Clear Creek on Monday: The restricted area extends from the western boundary of unincorporated Jefferson County through the eastern limits of Golden, including Vanover Park, a popular tubing spot near Ford Street. For now, some water activities will be restricted in the area, including those involving: All single-chambered air-inflated devices, such as belly boats Inner tubes Single-chambered rafts Body surfing Swimming As tubers flock to Colorado rivers, rescue crews urge safety and awareness Some activities will be allowed, but the sheriff's office said recreators are encouraged to be extremely cautious due to safety concerns around swiftly moving water and floating debris. The following are exempt from the restrictions: Kayaks Whitewater canoes Multi-chambered, professionally guided rafts River boards Authorized users and occupants must have Type I, Type III, or Type V Coast Guard-approved flotation vests and helmets for water use, the sheriff's office said. The sheriff's office said it is working with local police to 'strictly' enforce the restrictions to minimize risk, and said violators could be issued a summons for a class 2 petty offense, which could come with a fine up to $100. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Yahoo
20 hours ago
- Yahoo
Denver weather: Warmer and drier week ahead
DENVER (KDVR) — A few thunderstorms will linger Sunday evening, ahead of a warmer and drier pattern moving into Denver's weather forecast. A few thunderstorms will linger Sunday evening before clearing Sunday night. Low temperatures will be seasonal and fall to around 50 degrees. FOX31 Newsletters: Sign up for weather alerts from the Pinpoint Weather team Monday starts the week off with lots of sunshine. This will aid in a warming trend, and high temperatures will climb to nearly 80 degrees. Sunshine will aid in even warmer temperatures on Tuesday. Tuesday's high will be in the mid-80s, which is about 5 degrees warmer than normal for this time of year. FOX31 Weather: View the latest Denver forecasts, maps and radar Wednesday, Thursday and Friday will look similar with morning sunshine, followed by increasing clouds and a few afternoon and evening thunderstorms as high temperatures climb to the mid to upper 80s. Sunshine returns by the weekend, and could put Denver on track for the first 90-degree day of the season. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Yahoo
2 days ago
- Yahoo
Denver weather: Mild Sunday, but warmer and drier next week
DENVER (KDVR) — Temperatures will dip slightly Sunday, but otherwise the Denver weather forecast is looking drier and warmer starting Monday. There may be a couple of stray thunderstorms Sunday afternoon in the foothills and near metro Denver, but the majority will not see any rainfall. View the latest Weather Alerts in Denver and across Colorado on FOX31 Skies will be clear overnight Saturday with temperatures near normal in the lower 50s. It may be a little breezy at times with a southwesterly wind around 10-20 miles per hour. Overall, it will be a tranquil night in Colorado. It will cool off a few degrees for Sunday afternoon when temperatures climb into the low and middle 70s in northeast Colorado. The mountains will see middle and upper 70s, with 80s expected elsewhere in the state. Conditions will be largely dry across metro Denver and the plains, but a stray storm or two may roll out of the foothills in the mid-afternoon. FOX31 Newsletters: Sign up for weather alerts from the Pinpoint Weather team Monday will stay in the upper 70s with mostly sunny and dry conditions forecast for most. Beginning Tuesday, the thermostat cranks up when it returns to the middle 80s. Temperatures stay in the middle-to-upper 80s for the remainder of next week. Only minor rain chances are in the forecast for Wednesday through Friday, so the week-long stretch of wet weather looks to be ending. It may get close to 90 degrees for the first time this season next weekend. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.