blamebrampton: 15th century woodcut of a hound (Default)
blamebrampton ([personal profile] blamebrampton) wrote2009-02-10 06:58 pm

Much as it pains me to take issue with The Times ...

It seems incomprehensible to some media commentators that over 181 people could die in fires in Australia. They have been casting about, trying to place blame, saying that things were done poorly, done wrong.

This is not true. What is true is that the right things to do, the things that kept you alive in every other year, every other fire, are now no longer necessarily right.

Everyone who lives through an Australian summer has some experience of bushfire, even if it is only red-blazing sunsets in smoke-filled skies. The trees explode on the hot summer days, and half the flora is designed to regenerate after burning.

There are rules. You choose whether you will leave early or stay and fight. If you're leaving, you pack your papers and photos, grab the kids and pets, make sure you have water and towels or blankets in the car in case the worst happens, and you leave before or when you see the smoke. Lock the house and tell the fire brigade where it is. They'll do what they can.

Stick to the main roads, drive steadily, obey the police or the fierys, pick up pedestrians if you need to. When you get to the evacuation centre, give your names and details, call your friends. Let the officials know if you move on.

If you stay, you fill everything you can inside the house with water. You wet everything you can outside. Clear all debris from around the house (you should have done this weeks ago). Use a tractor if you have one. Fuck the garden, you can replant. Bring in the pets. Have the car nearby, have the keys in your pocket. Have your backpacks of things each of you really need ready to go. Do what you can for the horses. If the flames are small and slow, you can stay outside and keep hosing. If they're fast and large, go in. Close everything. Put wet towels around every gap, have a ladder near the roof access. Stay down, keep the kids together; the bathroom is a good place, it's cool and strong and you can sit them in the bath. If you see flames coming inside and can wet them, do so. Wait till the front passes.

This is what you do in a normal fire. This is what you have time to do in a normal fire.

When it passes, you run around the house and put out the flames that are starting inside. You climb into the roof cavity and wet down any hot spots. You go outside and use your generator to pump water from the tanks, or the pool or the dam to hose down the roof and the property. If the house is too well alight, you leave it. You grab the kids, pets and packs and you climb into the car and drive away. The car is usually all right; it's the embers blown by the wind that have set fire to the house. You can often drive out through the burnt region, there's nothing left for the fire there anymore. Your tires may be a bit fucked-up by the hot tarmac, but it doesn't matter, you'll get to the country fire authority, or the town, or the sports oval.

This is what happens normally.

You stand around with the CFA and the SES and the Parks service and every other firefighter, and you shake hands and you say thanks, or bad luck, and you pitch in if your house is standing and your neighbour's isn't, and you see about handing out sausage sandwiches and cups of bad coffee and good tea. The CWA ladies bring cakes and fruit and toys for the little ones and make sure the fierys all have a good feed and get some sleep. The McDonald's managers and the local takeaway owners bring trays of juice and water and burgers and sandwiches, the pub brings beer by the slab.

Every year, it happens. Houses burn, livestock are lost, and people turn to each other and say that it sounded like a train, that the fire moved as fast as they could run. That they lost the house but the kids are okay. It's horrible, but it's normal.

None of this is normal.

This fire moved faster than any car, twice as fast in some places. The noise was like a jet engine, they say, and the oxygen was sucked from the air leaving people sheltering inside gasping desperately as the front passed. The weather had stood above 40 for a week, the air was crisp and the vegetation bone dry. On the day the fires swept through it was 46 in Victoria.

It's never 46. Never. Not till now. The records were shattered by several degrees.

The radiant heat has been described as like Dresden. Houses were exploding into flame ahead of the firefront. While normal ember attacks give you a decent length of time for the house to stand before it is unsalvageable (the eaves and under the house start smouldering, small fires begin, but it's usually after the front has past that the house really catches light), this time large properties were gone in minutes. Normally the embers strike when the fire is up to a kilometre away, this time it was many times that.

Some people trying to escape died of dehydration before the fire reached them. Others who escaped the flames had skin crisped from their bodies as they ran well ahead or away. Some lived, and are in hospital fighting for their lives now. Cars have turned into makeshift crematoria, sometimes beside trees that are scorched from heat but not burned.

There were warnings where there could be warnings. All day the ABC and the local stations kept as far ahead of the fire as they could, but for Kinglake and some other towns, the fire moved faster than the news. The brigades were mostly fighting established fronts, trying to keep them from residential areas. The new fronts took them by surprise, many coming from nothing, possibly from arsonists.

I know that it is human to look for blame. I know that there are many who are angry and who wish to say that something or someone failed. But for the most part, no one failed. It was impossible to succeed.

There are systems. This country is used to fire and plans accordingly. The fire danger is rated from 1 to 100, so the authorities know how prepared they need to be, how many crews they need in place. On Saturday in Victoria, it was 320. More than three times worse than the experienced authorities had imagined they would ever need to prepare for. There was no way that people could deal with those flames.

And still they went out and did what they could. When I worked for the parks service in NSW I helped in two safe areas of two comparatively piddling fires. I was scared to the bones, and I am someone who keeps her head in a crisis. The sheer mental toughness of everyone who went up against those fires cannot be overstated.

So if your news service starts with the question 'what went wrong' and answers it with anything other than 'nature is a fucking bitch in Australia', please tell them to piss off in your best Hugh Jackman tones.

The lovely and admirable Ms Quentin Bryce, Governor-General of Australia has just made a gentle and compassionate plea to the nation to help where they can. In the far north of Queensland, people who have lost everything but the house in severe floods (because Australian nature s a fucking bitch with a truly twisted sense of humour) have been donating part of their emergency payments to the fire victims. The continent may be a place of horror, but the Australian people have genuine grace.

Thank you so much to everyone who has reached into their pockets to help people and animals recover from this disaster. The Australian Red Cross will take any donation from A$5 up. That's essentially a coffee.

During the writing of this post, the number at the start of this post has gone up. The police say that it will go up more.

[identity profile] liadlaith.livejournal.com 2009-02-10 11:25 pm (UTC)(link)
I am here via [livejournal.com profile] copperbadge's journal.

Thank you for this, I will be linking it to anyone who starts saying "Oh they should have evacuated the minute they knew there was a fire," and generally playing the blame game. Shut up, you armchair survivalists.

If I were to blame anything, it would be climate change, and perhaps amorphously the government's paltry response to it, but that isn't going to bring anyone back from the dead or rebuild anyone's homes. All we can do is pick ourselves up, learn from this and look to the future.

[identity profile] blamebrampton.livejournal.com 2009-02-10 11:26 pm (UTC)(link)
I agree entirely. And there will be years of commissions and inquiries coming out of this to see what can be learned. For now, I wish all the media would focus on aid rather than look for pat, and probably wrong, answers.

[identity profile] blamebrampton.livejournal.com 2009-02-10 11:31 pm (UTC)(link)
*Adds some more of mine and sends them all south*

You're very welcome. I know from the London Bombings who frustrating it can be to be many miles away from something that you want to understand and help with, and have not enough information coming in. XXX

[identity profile] blamebrampton.livejournal.com 2009-02-10 11:34 pm (UTC)(link)
Thanks, Bubba. I live within fairly easy walking distance of the Sydney Opera House these days, so aside from big tsunamis and hail storms, am almost entirely insulated from natural disasters. I am just relieved that all of my friends have so far been safe. I'm so sorry that you have first-hand experience of fire, thanks for your thoughts and prayers for Victoria, you know exactly how much they need them.

[identity profile] blamebrampton.livejournal.com 2009-02-10 11:42 pm (UTC)(link)
It is terrible. You know exactly what it's like when you have to make hard choices about leaving or staying. It's heartbreaking to hear the stories coming out of Victoria, where every decision seems to have been an unprecedented gamble. jamie2109 has been down on the scene, and her posts convey much of what it's like. And then there was this news story: http://www.smh.com.au/national/why-a-town-was-left-without-water-tankers-20090210-83id.html

[identity profile] brinian.livejournal.com 2009-02-10 11:45 pm (UTC)(link)
This is a really good post. Thanks. I know that fires are part of life in the affected area, but from what I've read these are simply extraordinarily horrific. We don't get Aussie news in the US, but I do watch BBC America news whenever I'm home at the right time to try to find out what's going on in the wider world. Our coverage has been minimal and trivial. I feel about the people involved almost like I did when we lived in California. There is so much you can do to be prepared for an earthquake and then a really bad one hits and all the things you did to be prepared just aren't enough. But they do help a little and having been prepared, you feel that you fought back as best you could at least.

[identity profile] hogwartsvixxxen.livejournal.com 2009-02-10 11:49 pm (UTC)(link)
I came here form [personal profile] jamie2109 I'm an Amercian but I have been Blessed by a few LJ family members in Austrailia. First I want to offer my Prayers for you and yours and your Country.

Second since we are facing eviction my wife and I will do what we can, but know that we cry and Pray with you daily.A$5 up. That's essentially a coffee. sometimes we don't even have that but we will try. Being in Amercia and safe in Philly makes us want to do more but please tell me what can we do other than Pray and share in your grief by looking at the pictures and following the updates. We don't have TV so we don't get any news.

Also I was hoping you might clear something up for me. I've heard that the main fire might have been delibertly set. Is there any truth in that?

Stay safe and may I friend you to keep abreast of things.

Love and Prayers
Deborah

[identity profile] oddishly.livejournal.com 2009-02-10 11:57 pm (UTC)(link)
:) Thanks, darlin'! And, you know, it's actually 3 minutes to midnight as I type, so you totally weren't late :) You are ENTIRELY AWESOME, I should tell you this more often :)

[identity profile] blamebrampton.livejournal.com 2009-02-11 12:34 am (UTC)(link)
I keep reading the koala rescue story once an hour to make the news seem a little more encouraging. It's just too hard otherwise.

At the moment, conservative estimates of the damages bill are at half a billion Australian dollars, though they are expected to climb. The Red Cross emergency fund is currently a little over $30 million, many properties were uninsured, many others underinsured. If you could mention to friends and colleagues that small, coffee-sized donations can be made, that would be great, as they quickly add up to significant sums.

[identity profile] norton-gale.livejournal.com 2009-02-11 12:54 am (UTC)(link)
This is journalism at its best - you've made the whole situation come alive, so realistically that just reading about it tugs at the reader's heart. I wish there was something more I could do. And yes, the degree of international coverage really is pathetic.

[identity profile] thysanotus.livejournal.com 2009-02-11 01:04 am (UTC)(link)


This. A thousand times this. Thank you.

A friend who works at the Victorian Coroner's Court told me they've been told to expect at least 300 deaths. It's grim, and horrible, but it was no-one's fault for following established procedures.

(here via [livejournal.com profile] jamie2109).

[identity profile] blamebrampton.livejournal.com 2009-02-11 01:27 am (UTC)(link)
93-94? It showed me very clearly that I would never live in the bush save with a moat. And yes, exactly. I was cranky with one of The Times' editorials that cheerfully went on at length about what who was to blame. Three hundred years of rampant industrial growth was strangely left off the list ...

Nice comment from your parliamentarian, sadly so true. I swear, if Australians weren't so charming, I'd do the bunk!

[identity profile] blamebrampton.livejournal.com 2009-02-11 01:36 am (UTC)(link)
In all that snow? Sadist! I jest, I know that you would make everyone cups of cocoa and give them blankies.

Yeah, I know that it's very hard to understand what's going on, which is why I wanted to help a little so that people could see why we're all banging on so much about charity if its possible.

[identity profile] bryoneybrynn.livejournal.com 2009-02-11 01:47 am (UTC)(link)
I donated! Red Cross. I can at least do that, you know? :)

[identity profile] blamebrampton.livejournal.com 2009-02-11 01:53 am (UTC)(link)
Thanks love! I know times are rough all over, so you are, as they say in these parts, a bloody legend!

[identity profile] blamebrampton.livejournal.com 2009-02-11 02:03 am (UTC)(link)
They have spent the last two days bulldozing huge breaks around threatened townships, what normally happens now is they let the bush burn itself out and just concentrate on saving homes and towns and stock, plus keeping some stands of bush for any wildlife that survives.

Thank you so much for the donation, and it IS a big thing. That's food, shelter, emergency clothing. $10 is enough for food for a day, you've made a difference.

[identity profile] i-autumnheart.livejournal.com 2009-02-11 02:20 am (UTC)(link)
That was the summer, yes - my second-ever callout was part of the first response team to South Turramurra. I did 4 shifts that week, the longest about 18 hours... Mum was overseas and Dad (also in the brigade) and I were alternating shifts after that first one (they don't like to put family members on the same crew). Our street was on evacuation alert from the Hawkesbury fire at one point as well - we had everything packed up to go.

Of course, at that particular set of fires, the only houses we lost were the ones where people left - usually because of sparks in the roof cavity if I recall correctly. It really, truly is usually safe to stay at home if you're reasonably fit and sensible.

The conditions in Victoria last weekend were way beyond anything that those fires reached, though... they might have been about that intense at the Hawkesbury: the bush there was pretty much reduced to black sandstone, but that wasn't in a populated area, and the weather was nowhere near as hot, so it was easier to bring the fire under control.

[identity profile] blindmouse.livejournal.com 2009-02-11 02:27 am (UTC)(link)
Thank you for this post.

One of the things which has struck me most, actually, has been the lack of frantic blame, the lack of hysterical grief. The country Australian reputation for laid backness in action - you hear interviews on the radio, the soundbites chosen for maximum effect, and these people who have lost everything, who spent hours being terrified, who saw this incredible disaster - they sound a bit shaken, maybe. They say they'd never seen anything like the fire and then say that the emergency services have been really great, they're impressed with how well set up the relief centres are. They agree with the interviewer, it's been pretty bad, but they'll get by, right?

It's kind of amazing.

[identity profile] enchanted-jae.livejournal.com 2009-02-11 03:16 am (UTC)(link)
I can't tell you how heartbroken I've been to read your posts and those of moonflower_rose and jamie2109, and all of you in Australia. I'm scared for all of you and horrified at the number of deaths. Take care.

[identity profile] ashlein.livejournal.com 2009-02-11 03:56 am (UTC)(link)
here via [livejournal.com profile] blindmouse

Very well said and everything is true.

I've received so many emails asking what went wrong and why wasn't everyone prepared. I live in Sydney, on a mountain, surrounded by vegetation and every year we do the same thing, clear the gutters, mow the lawns, dispose of anything that could possibly start a fire.

After the bushfires here a couple of Christmases ago, we started to prepare packs just in case no matter the temperature because nature is a bitch. The weather is unpredictable and you never have enough time. There is no such thing as enough time.

I've pointed all of this out to people and I've yelled at the stupid experts on CNN who want to place blame on the wrong people. It was the weather (and arsonists? I'm not too sure of the facts right there)and we can only do what we can do. The right thing isn't always enough.

I'm about to make a similar post on my lj about donating. Would it be ok if I linked to this post? You said everything I want to say only better.



[identity profile] amarafox.livejournal.com 2009-02-11 04:40 am (UTC)(link)
I came here by a friend. I'm in Canada now, but I lived in Australia for 9 years, in Perth. I know what those upper 40s feel like. The heat, the air so dry that you feel thatif you walked you would start a fire.

The fact the fire was moving faster than cars sends chills through me. I'm plannong on donating some money because it's the least I can do. I don't know anyone directly affected by the fires (Although some of my perthite friends moved to Victoria) but they all know someone who has been.

Nothing could have prepared anyone for a firestorm moving over 200km an hour and over 4 storeys high in some places. Nobody :(

[identity profile] blamebrampton.livejournal.com 2009-02-11 06:38 am (UTC)(link)
*Turns west and waves at where you probably are*

You certainly can. If I just manage to help a few people understand why there were no easy solutions, I'll be happy. If the Red Cross can earn a little, I'll be thrilled.

I think that it's just too hard to understand if you've never been here or never lived in the bush. When I first moved to Sydney I lived on the upper North Shore and had just moved out when the 93-94 fires hit my old suburb. I did some piddling work helping clean up spot fires during those days in areas that had many escape roads.

Since then I have lived in Newtown or Erskineville. I will NEVER live in or near the bush here unless I have enough money for a moat, and all-brass sprinklers, and a pet CFA, it's just too unpredictable. And I formed those fears based on a fire which, as my fire-fighting friend has said, was a campfire compared to this one. I am just in awe of the Victorian CFA and everyone else who fought over the last week.

As to arsonists, there have definitely been some active in both Victoria and NSW, though the ones that have been seen or caught have been responsible for small non-lethal fires as far as I know. As for whether they were responsible for the major fronts that have hit Marysville, Kinglake and so on, I know they are being cautious about attributing causes at the moment, so it could be months before we know, if ever.

Anyway ... *Waves again* Keep your gutters clear! I hope the wet continues up here!

[identity profile] blamebrampton.livejournal.com 2009-02-11 06:54 am (UTC)(link)
You're very welcome. I will do a lot of things to pimp the Red Cross, writing is easy :-)
ext_7906: (bandom - alfred)

[identity profile] complications-g.livejournal.com 2009-02-11 06:54 am (UTC)(link)
I'm very glad. :)

[identity profile] blamebrampton.livejournal.com 2009-02-11 06:55 am (UTC)(link)
Thanks so much. Money is great, and prayers and thoughts are very welcome. I suppose that the only good thing that will come out of this is new and even better fighting and evacuation strategies that other similar regions, like your state, will be able to use.

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