anaqua Arizona cypress athel Australian pine Carolina poplar Chinese arborvitae Chinese tallow eucalyptus fan palm Gulf Coast cedar gum elastic hackberry Italian cypress Japanese varnish tree live oak ornamental date palm pecan pistacia Rio Grande ash sycamore

West Texas

Arizona ash Arizona cypress aspen popple Austrian pine Chinese arborvitae Chinese elm green ash hackberry live oak mountain cottonwood pistacia redcedar Rocky mountain juniper Russian mulberry Russian olive silver poplar Spanish oak thornless honeylocust western yellow pine

Panhandle

American elm apricot Arizona cypress Austrian pine black locust Carolina poplar Chinese arborvitae Chinese maple Chinese elm Colorado blue spruce green ash hackberry loblolly pine pistacia redcedar red mulberry Russian mulberry Russian olive sand plum shortleaf pine Siberian elm silver poplar sycamore thornless honeylocust western yellow pine

CODE OF BEHAVIOR
WITH
OUTDOOR FIREBRANDS

1. Burn household trash only in a metal or cinder block container on an area cleared to bare soil.

2. Burn fields and brush piles only in the late afternoon when the wind is low and after a 5-foot fire-break has been plowed around the field.

3. Break matches and crush smokes before discarding.

4. Use car ash tray for smokes and used matches when traveling in a vehicle. Don’t pitch them out the window.

5. Clear the area around a warming or camp fire before lighting it.

6. Extinguish all warming and camp fires when you leave. Be sure all fires are Dead Out.

Transcriber’s Notes