Deadly Bushfires in Australia, 2019/2020

  • #121
Eden's wharf offered a refuge from fire, then police warned it wasn't safe

Hundreds of people in the New South Wales coastal town of Eden have faced the choice of defending their homes or fleeing as authorities warn a massive fire is moving towards the area.Dozens had sought shelter on Eden's wharf, but police this morning warned that area was no longer safe.

A police officer told tourists and those not able to defend their homes to leave at his briefing this morning.

"We cannot guarantee your safety at present under the conditions that we have now here at the Eden Wharf," he said.

The anxiety for all these displaced people must just be so overwhelming :(

And when you look at this map , just getting out is not that easy with all the roads closed :eek:

خرائط ‪Google‬‏‏
 
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  • #122
Jacinda Ardern

Today we confirmed that our defence force will be assisting Australia with their response to the catastrophic fires.

Engineers and three NH90s (twin engine helicopters) will be deployed to Australia to support them as they continue to battle the fires raging across multiple areas.

This is by no means the only thing we can do to help, and we’re at the ready and talking to our neighbours frequently. I’ll keep you all updated.


Thankyou !!!
 
  • #123
https://www.smh.com.au/national/nsw/bushfires-hit-nsw-south-coast-20191231-h1kqd7.html
Australia burns - in photos

WARNING: distressing images (animals)

In the link is a tear-jerking collection of 98 photos of the widespread destruction but also the human faces and sense of community in the wake of the fires. Damn, I wish I could do more :(
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  • #124
  • #125
We know our mates and we will never forget you.
 
  • #126
  • #127
  • #128
Some interesting background reading.
The Alternatives – Bushfire Front

I have a lot of Australian friends. My heart hurts for them.

A fascinating read, Vail, thank you for posting. I couldn't agree more with what they are advocating. I hope some good will come from this tragedy and bushfire experts and rural landowners across the country with years of experience will finally be heard. Only time will tell...
 
  • #129
I was there in 2016/17, in the country that means so much to me. Fortunately there were no bush fires around then.

My thoughts go to the Australian people, my cousin and friends who live in Canberra, the animals living there who cannot rescue themselves. Prayers for the brave firefighters who work beyond exhaustion. The situation is just heartbreaking. I pray for rain to come.
 
  • #130
Heartwarming footage and photos have emerged of a young koala who miraculously escaped the bushfires by hitchhiking a ride in a water tanker.

Damian Campbell-Davys was on duty refilling fire trucks in fire-ravaged town of Nerriga in the Southern Tablelands in New South Wales on Sunday when he came across the distressed marsupial staggering out from burnt bushland destroyed in the Currowan blaze.

Desperate for shelter, the dehydrated koala climbed inside the truck and was offered a drink from Mr Campbell-Davys' water bottle.

Rescued koala melts firefighters' hearts after staggering out from his burning habitat | Daily Mail Online

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  • #131
  • #132
New Zealand residents call police over 'orange haze' from Australian Bushfires
Due to the number of calls received about the haze clogging up emergency lines, police have been forced to ask residents to refrain from calling them to ask about the orange skies.

Twitter has been flooded with pictures from Auckland, with one saying they can smell it in the city too
New Zealand residents call police over 'orange haze' from Australian bushfires
 
  • #133
New Zealand residents call police over 'orange haze' from Australian Bushfires
Due to the number of calls received about the haze clogging up emergency lines, police have been forced to ask residents to refrain from calling them to ask about the orange skies.

Twitter has been flooded with pictures from Auckland, with one saying they can smell it in the city too
New Zealand residents call police over 'orange haze' from Australian bushfires

I can’t believe people are being so foolish and calling the police about this surely they are well aware of what the horrific horrendous devastation happening in Australia.
 
  • #134
:mad::mad::mad:

‘Ultimate betrayal’: RFS volunteer charged with starting seven bushfires

A Rural Fire Service volunteer has been arrested and charged with lighting a series of bushfires on the state’s far south coast.

Seven fires have been deliberately lit in the Bega Valley area over the last five weeks.

The Financial Crime Squad’s Arson Unit have been investigating the fires in conjunction with RFS fire investigators and local police.

At about 5.20pm on Tuesday, officers saw observed a man sitting in a dual cab ute next to the Bega River.

Shortly afterwards, investigators noticed smoke and a pile of trees and grass on fire.

Later that night, police attended a fire shed at Tarraganda and arrested a 19-year-old man.

He’s alleged to have lit the fire and left the area before returning in his role as volunteer RFS firefighter.
 
  • #135
We’re for Sydney | Daily Telegraph

It's a very long article but well worth reading :)

The terrifying power of a fire front is something that has to be experienced to be believed, writes Daily Telegraph cartoonist and volunteer firefighter Warren Brown, who has been battling the lethal Green Wattle Creek fire.

The lethal Green Wattle Creek fire — the blaze that claimed the lives of RFS firefighters Geoffrey Keaton and Andrew O’Dwyer — has now expanded to alarming proportions, burning its way into the tortuous, tangled wilderness west of Mittagong to the Wombeyan Caves.

Normally during the holiday season, the five limestone caves at Wombeyan are a popular tourist attraction for campers and families, yet simply getting there is something of an undertaking.

Heading west from Mittagong, the caves are only accessible by negotiating a 68km-long single-lane dirt road that plummets rapidly to the Wollondilly River through a seemingly never-ending series of hairpin bends before soaring through even more alarming zigzags, the road carved precariously along near-vertical mountainsides — on one side of the track a wall of rock on the other a breathtaking drop to the valley floor.

Once the road reaches the caves’ facilities and camping area it continues to climb west, zigzagging through dense forest to link up with the Taralga/Oberon road.

To put it simply, there’s one road in and one road out — an unimaginable nightmare in a bushfire.

snip

Like so many other RFS brigades in the region and those from far afield, my local brigade from Middle Arm Wayo in the Southern Tablelands has been tasked with sending trucks and crews to be part of a strike team — a co-ordinated 24-hour operational force to stop the Green Wattle Creek fire from spreading further.

On Friday it was my turn to be part of the strike team.

On leaving, the captain of the Taralga brigade gives me good advice: “Always wear your helmet. A branch came down and hit a firefighter on the head — thank God he had his helmet on.”

snip

From here on in we can only prepare for the unexpected — it’s helmets on, jackets, gloves, boots. The truck is “under lights”, with the eerie flashing of red and blue cutting through the smoke.

We’re descending into a world that is now the sole domain of passing convoys of RFS trucks, command vehicles, National Parks 4WDs zipping about and the sound of constantly operating graders and bulldozers clearing blocked roads and creating fire breaks to short-circuit the encroaching fire.

snip

Radio traffic is always brief, blunt and unequivocal yet it’s through hearing other conversations that you gain a bigger picture of what’s taking place.

We hear a crew asking for advice. They’d been approached by an agitated resident who owned a shed somewhere deep within the area who wanted to make his way through the fireground to retrieve some of his gear.

The return advice is unequivocal: “Under no circumstances can this individual enter the area.”

The crew — clearly being harangued — replies: “He says he’s got a chainsaw and can cut his way along the track if trees have come down.”

The response is even clearer: “Tell him under no circumstances can he enter!”

We listen, incredulous someone was seriously intending to dash into the fire to retrieve whatever he wanted from his shed. It’s like deciding to run back into a raging war zone because you’d forgotten your glasses.

snip

WALKING INTO APOCALYPSE

We head along the track driving across vast sections of fire-blasted rubble that are an iridescent pink — the result of an aerial bombardment of red fire retardant. This place has quite clearly been through an inferno of apocalyptic proportions.

We stumble across what was a cattle yard and to our amazement a house still in tact that somehow survived what was clearly a catastrophic situation.

The owner comes out to greet us — he’s quite clearly been through hell, his house narrowly avoiding oblivion thanks to the brilliant work of the water bombers.

An RFS deputy captain himself, he’s particularly glad to see us and points us in the direction of where the fire front is expected to break out, at the back of what is a sanctuary for brumbies. We’re joined by two other Southern Tablelands brigade crews — from the district of Roslyn and the town of Bigga. None of us have ever met before but there’s an amazing, unspoken camaraderie and ease. I’m particularly relieved as I have nowhere near the experience of these hardened blokes from the bush.

The brumbies in the paddock are clearly nervous — the feeling of the oncoming fire is palpable to everyone and everything — and we can see the pall of grey smoke coming closer and closer.

RISKY BUSINESS

The three fire trucks are lined up in preparation for the oncoming fire to pass before us when suddenly a LandCruiser towing an overladen trailer comes bouncing flat out along the fire trail. The driver pulls up, clearly pleased with himself. He’d somehow made his way into the forest and was able to retrieve his gear from his shed before the fire arrived. He told us he’d had to chainsaw his way along the track to get there, but he’d done it. He then got out to try and reposition everything that he’d thrown in the trailer.

We stare in disbelief.

He thought he was a hero. I thought he was a thoughtless, selfish dimwit.

And sure enough the fire came, its advance foot soldiers the ever-growing heat and small flames that scorched tree bark and leaves on the ground.

Then a greater force takes hold of the scrub along the fence line and before long the main attack arrives — an inferno soaring to the full height of the trees, creating black twisters of fire and smoke spiralling into the air, burning precisely where the LandCruiser and trailer sat only half an hour before.

snip

Tops of towering gumtrees were ablaze and we stand waiting for the trees to begin ‘crowning’, where the whole canopy of tree tops relays fire in a sea of flame and heat. It came close, awfully close.

The three crews were operating non-stop in extinguishing whatever the fire wanted to throw our way. And then it seemed almost as quickly as the fire arrived it had rolled on through, hungry to devour more dry bushland.


What legends all you firies are :)
 
  • #136
  • #137
Thanks for all of the articles, Doc x
 
  • #138
  • #139
Army to help bury livestock lost to fires

Army reservists will help bury more than one hundred thousand sheep and cattle killed in the bushfires.

Agriculture Minister Bridget McKenzie confirmed defence personnel would dig the pits to dispose dead livestock in over coming days and weeks.

The prime minister has launched a national bushfire recovery agency led by former Australian Federal Police commissioner Andrew Colvin.

The agency will offer income support to farmers, small business owners and residents affected by the fires.

Farmers who lost stock will be an urgent priority as the government responds to the fires.

"We will be trying to take pre-emptive steps today with state agencies around making sure the disposal of the livestock is done quickly - there is a biosecurity risk there," Mr Littleproud said.

Mental health supports are another major focus of the cabinet meeting.


BBM: I am so happy to read this , mental health effects from these fires for everyone is going to be huge IMO
 
  • #140
3 Nov 2019

Todd Davis, a 20-year Hercules-flying veteran from the US state of Wyoming was at the controls of the plane at 4.30pm on Tuesday, when he was tasked to help protect homes coming under threat at South Turramurra.

Most of the sticky pink retardant landed on the fire and the bush, but the tail-end painted roads, homes and cars.

"We don’t usually plan that", Davis told 10 News First
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Pilot Accidentally Covers Sydney Suburb In Bright Pink Flame Retardant

Do you know why the retardant is pink?

It is coloured that way to show where it has been dropped.
Fire retardant is commonly clear.
 

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