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.

arcanetrivia: a light purple swirl on a darker purple background (Default)

[personal profile] arcanetrivia 2009-02-11 07:19 am (UTC)(link)
Wow. I honestly had no idea what this was like (woo! My Yankee ignorance showing again!). I just... wow.

[identity profile] jenerationb.livejournal.com 2009-02-11 07:34 am (UTC)(link)
Thanks for that. I was struggling to understand how people couldn't see a fire and get the fuck out of there ASAP. But now I've got a good picture of what actually happened.
veracity: (Australia - Sarah Porch)

[personal profile] veracity 2009-02-11 09:02 am (UTC)(link)
I was linked here from [livejournal.com profile] irreparable.

I had already planned on donating money, and I were living there, I'd probably provide more. Not because it's horrific (though it is) or it's a nice gesture (though it is). I'd do it because it's right. You help out. You take care. You remember people matter. I'll donate more in a couple weeks because I have a feeling what's being donated now will be used up in a week, if not less. So I'll wait and give more then.

It's so wrong and terrible and wrong. There's not words. I'm from the southeast US where brushfires are more limited to Florida. But I know about nature's bitchy attitudes and capricious nature. We had a tornado in the beginning of March that ripped through Atlanta. We have our hurricanes and their destructive selves. As much as it hurts as humans, answers don't always appear. Sometimes a bad thing is just a bad thing. The only blame that can be attributed are the arsonists and I have faith your system will convict them.

When my godmother dies, which could be a decade or more, I'm planning on moving to Australia. Not that I've been, but it's one of the few places I can pin on a map and say "that's it." Others are far more local, but there's also Rome. There's something about your country, though. It calls. How can I hope help a land calling?
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[identity profile] iamshadow.livejournal.com 2009-02-11 09:37 am (UTC)(link)
Thank you for this post. I did a similar-but-different post on my own journal yesterday, trying to explain what it's like growing up in a place where bushfires are part of life. I think that so many people outside Australia just don't understand why and how a fire can be so dangerous, how it can move so quickly and so ferociously that even with the best preparation, there's nothing to be done, and survival is a matter of sheer luck.

I grew up in the shadow of the Blue Mountains in NSW. My grandparents and aunt and uncle were evacuated in '94. My mother told stories of the fires in the '60s and '70s, the mountains alight as far as the eye could see, the sky black and raining burnt leaves on suburban Penrith houses, miles away.

No one who knows Australia and knows fires could blame anyone for this. This is one of those horrific fires that happens once every ten years or so that can't be controlled. If we're lucky, they just burn through miles of National Park, far away from settlement. If we're not, then we pay the price.
ext_77335: (Default)

[identity profile] iamshadow.livejournal.com 2009-02-11 09:44 am (UTC)(link)
From an Aussie.... the reality is, who do you blame? It's a freak fire that defied control or prediction. Fires are something we all have to live with. Nobody's going to point their fingers at the firies or the victims. They did the best they could. The firies are mostly volunteers who work to save homes and lives until they're literally dropping. If they can't save a home, then nobody is going to believe that they didn't try hard enough. When weather and nature and bad luck combine against you, there is literally nothing that you can do that these people didn't do. You can try shaking your fist at the sky, but it won't bring your house, your friends, or your dog back. All you can do is start to pick up the pieces.

[identity profile] rosathome.livejournal.com 2009-02-11 12:08 pm (UTC)(link)
I think that the only blame-giving I have seen has been directed against those who are thought to have started some of these fires deliberately. And, I have to say that, if that is the case, they deserve to take that blame.
ext_42328: Language is my playground (Not a Woman)

[identity profile] ineptshieldmaid.livejournal.com 2009-02-11 12:39 pm (UTC)(link)
UGH.

Thank you.

My boss is a firefighter, and like many firefighters, she thinks she knows everything about fire, and that no one should die in a fire unless they're stupid. Apparently 200 or so people died of 'panic'. If I weren't new to the job, I'd slam her a link to this...
ext_42328: Language is my playground (Not a Woman)

[identity profile] ineptshieldmaid.livejournal.com 2009-02-11 12:41 pm (UTC)(link)
No one who knows Australia and knows fires could blame anyone for this.

On Monday, I sat there while NSW firefighters did all the stupid blaming referenced here in this post, and I did not know enough about normal fires or about THESE fires to contradict the assessment that 107 people had died of 'stupidity'.
ext_42328: Language is my playground (Default)

[identity profile] ineptshieldmaid.livejournal.com 2009-02-11 12:45 pm (UTC)(link)
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.

I keep saying that.

I just realised that I'm living about half a suburb away from one of the suburbs gutted in the Canberra fires of '03, and my appartment block backs onto a park. *Twitches*

[identity profile] blamebrampton.livejournal.com 2009-02-11 12:45 pm (UTC)(link)
Ooh, I wish I knew her so I could sing a loud and long chorus of 'bullshit'.

You can't be prone to panic if you live in the bush. Everything is poised to kill you from the snakes to the spiders to the fire to the floods to some of the crankier sheep. You'd never leave the house. Has she been reading any of the coverage in the Herald? The firefighters' stories have me in awe that they could save anyone at all.

[identity profile] agreva.livejournal.com 2009-02-11 12:47 pm (UTC)(link)
As horrific it is that this is happening, it's also showing how much people are willing to come together and help in such a desperate time.

[identity profile] blamebrampton.livejournal.com 2009-02-11 12:47 pm (UTC)(link)
That's very good. There have been a few editorials in the British and American papers that have made me cranky, even while I understand why they find it incomprehensible.

As to the arsonists, it does now look as though at least one of the fatal fires was set on purpose. I don't like to think what will happen to the culprit/s if they are caught, though I am afraid they'll deserve it.
ext_42328: Language is my playground (Default)

[identity profile] ineptshieldmaid.livejournal.com 2009-02-11 12:48 pm (UTC)(link)
She's been reading ALL the coverage. *shrug* I've known a few firies with that sort of attitude over the years... unless they've faced down a major disaster fire recently, some of them get cocksure and wind up LIKING fire more than they fear it.

[identity profile] blamebrampton.livejournal.com 2009-02-11 12:55 pm (UTC)(link)
Yeah, I worked with a guy like that when I was with NPWS years ago. Turned out to be an arsonist.

I ran away and went back to journalism, becoming a very good editor. Do you see me wandering up to people and telling them they've lost track of their subject noun in that sentence? Grrrr. You keep the attitude you have, it's the right one!

[identity profile] grey-hunter.livejournal.com 2009-02-11 01:21 pm (UTC)(link)
Arsonists??? Are they crazy or do you mean that backfire-thingy gone wrong-type?

[identity profile] blamebrampton.livejournal.com 2009-02-11 01:25 pm (UTC)(link)
Crazy, I am afraid. They appear every summer, but it's not usually this bad.
plotbunniofdoom: (Default)

Got linked here by iamshadow

[personal profile] plotbunniofdoom 2009-02-11 02:29 pm (UTC)(link)
Thanks for this, it really helps me (from the UK) understand what it's like. The news doesn't always give the clearest picture.

[identity profile] silmaril.livejournal.com 2009-02-11 03:37 pm (UTC)(link)
[livejournal.com profile] starlightforest linked here. I donated. Thank you for writing this.

I am so sorry for the suffering of everyone.

Best of luck and speed in the recovery/rebuilding.

[identity profile] winterthunder.livejournal.com 2009-02-11 05:52 pm (UTC)(link)
I've created a community to bring together people who are offering fic or other items in return for donations. Would you be willing to help me spread the word on [profile] australia_aid?

[identity profile] winnett.livejournal.com 2009-02-11 06:33 pm (UTC)(link)
Wow... It is amazing to hear this coming from you and your perspective. My heart goes out to you, your family, your countrymen, my fellow humans and critters on this earth. I have donated and I hope it helps. I wish I could go over there and help out.

It is events like this that remind us that Nature cannot always be harnessed.
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[identity profile] thisgirl-is.livejournal.com 2009-02-11 07:35 pm (UTC)(link)
It's really hard to know what to say in the face of all this. But it occured to me that saying nothing at all was not the forward.

Thanks for this - it helps when explaining it to people to be able to say more than, "It's bad, very bad".

There is this weird disconnect between my Real Life and the internet at the moment. My internet people are finding ways to donate, or encourage others to donate, and sending messages of support. The people in RL are barely if at all aware that it is even happening, and I don't even know how to start that conversation at the office.

I'm going to go hit the Red Cross site, and leave messages on the LJs of random Australians.
ext_65977: (GRIEF)

[identity profile] venturous1.livejournal.com 2009-02-11 09:40 pm (UTC)(link)
wow, that is deeply affecting. Thank you for helping me understand even more the situation and how devastating it is.

my prayers (and dollars)are going out to you.
ext_12944: (Default)

Yes.

[identity profile] delirieuse.livejournal.com 2009-02-11 10:17 pm (UTC)(link)
Thanks for this. I have a friend who lived in Marysville, and she did everything right. Followed her fireplan to the letter. Stayed next door in the 'fireproof' house. Only survived by luck, since the fireproof house wasn't stupid-amounts-of-radiant-heat proof (there was a tiny bit of wood upstairs around a windowframe that started smoking, then the window cracked and they had to evacuate).

I spent Tuesday night listening to her story, and it enrages me that people think that there is someone to blame for what happened. Some dickhead at my partner's work said that people were stupid for sticking around. In Marysville they didn't have TIME to evacuate.

[identity profile] parthenia14.livejournal.com 2009-02-11 10:49 pm (UTC)(link)
Here from meredyth 13, I think.

This is an amazing post. I'm in the Uk - I am so bowled over by the warmth and support that you guys are giving each other.

putting it where it belongs-blamebrampton

(Anonymous) 2009-02-12 01:37 am (UTC)(link)
I came across your article, 10th Feb, through an email sent to me.
I so strongly felt the need to tell you of my admiration for your strength, conviction, directness and honesty in your explanation on the current fire situation in Victoria. Your article would do well to be printed in all newspapers across the country. Seriously. It cuts to the chase...says it how it really is. Hopefully your words might just make some people think twice about feeling the need to blame and accept what was.

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