blamebrampton (
blamebrampton) wrote2013-01-06 09:13 pm
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Tasmania is burning
Tasmania is that place that exists within and without Australia. That triangular bit off the bottom that the people who do TV maps sometimes forget, or put in the wrong place. It's seen both as a place of tremendous culture and natural beauty, and as the place where the people with two heads live, because every country has one of those. And now tens of thousands of hectares of it are on fire.
The other day it was 41.8 degrees (107F) in Hobart, which is 20 degrees above average and the hottest temperature ever recorded there. It was even hotter on the Tasman Peninsula, a place that usually has pretty much the same climate and weather as Canterbury, and is a soft Kentish green.
Now swathes of Tasmania are charcoal, and over a hundred properties have been razed. Ten or fifteen of these are up in Bicheno, near Coles Bay and Freycinet, where the most beautiful walking trails in the world snake through forests of tall eucalypts, past white sand beaches, and granite ranges where giant trees soar up above orchids so small that you will only see them if you walk slowly, and look down.
Now the towns, mostly reliant on tourism and niche products, like jam and venison, are filled with smoke as volunteers fight to save them. The weather has cooled over the weekend, but there is no rain, in a place where there is always rain, and every day and night the fire crews fight to keep the blaze from jumping their lines. Boats are at the ready in the bays. If the roads are cut, people will shelter on them should the town be lost.
On the Tasman Peninsula, the town of Dunalley is smouldering. Sixty-five homes have been lost there, and the school. People who did not get to their cars before the roads were cut off fled to the water, with mothers sheltering with their children under the jetty, and boats taking on as many people as they could before they started to sit too low in the water.
At the moment about 100 people are missing in the area. Most of these will be found alive: there are people sheltering in many parts of the peninsula and power is down, so communications have been patchy. The fire there moved quickly, so people fled with nothing, not even phones, and who carries numbers in their heads these days? The police are searching buildings, but it is slow, and they are sifting through ashes, so it will be a while before they know if anyone was caught. So far there have been no confirmed deaths, and because the Black Saturday fires in Victoria the other year have primed everyone to go as soon as the alert comes, perhaps this time luck will prevail and everyone will be found alive.
Over a thousand people sheltered at Port Arthur. It's a large historic site, that is haunted by its past as a penal colony, and as the site of Australia's worst mass-homicide, where 36 people were killed by a madman with powerful guns. His actions saw automatic and semi-automatic guns banned here, and since then – 1996 – there has not been a single mass-killing by a gunman. Out of something horrible, something good came.
And so it was again. In a place that has seen such anguish, this time there was hope, as emergency services held the roads open and the carparks filled with the vehicles of refugees: many locals with their treasures stuffed into the boot and pets on their laps, but also many tourists, who had expected a quiet camping holiday in the beautiful Tasmanian wilderness.
Tourist ferries ran every hour they could, evacuating all who wanted to go. In Hobart, which is safe, those who have nowhere else to go are camping in public halls. Locals are turning up with food, water, nappies, changes of clothing and toys. And money, because Dunalley is gone, and the sawmill is ash, and that was where most of the jobs were. A family of seven needed to catch a flight to Brisbane from an airport two hours north, and two Taswegians turned up with their cars, happy to be a free taxi service.
Back at Port Arthur, those who didn't want to leave are camping with the staff and locals. They have shelter, food and a place of safety for pets and stock they have brought with them. The children have games supplied, and generators are being shipped down, because the power may take a month to reconnect.
One man shakily said that he had filled the car: goats, dogs and the cat, and got them all out alive. Another, the owner of the sawmill, shook his head and said, 'That's six or seven million dollars gone. And fifty years of my bloody life.' Insurers will pay out, and the government will help, because this is a rich country, but Dunalley will still be a town that is mostly gaps.
Meanwhile, in Port Arthur, cars sit lonely in the carparks. Many of them are rentals. Several rental companies have told those who fled that they will charge them each day until the cars are returned.
On Tuesday, it will be 43 degrees in Sydney. Twenty fires are already burning in New South Wales, but volunteers from here and Victoria have still gone down to Tasmania to help put theirs out. They have family preparing to pick them up from the airport with their kit in the car should they need to do a quick turnaround. Around the country, fire bans are in place, and warning levels are creeping up: Severe, Extreme, Catastrophic.
People in rural and regional areas have made their plans, packed their Go Bags, prepared their stock and kept the pets close. Those of us safe in the cities can smell smoke on the air – hope it's from backburning – and make plans to put a bit of money into the Red Cross this month, and wish never again to have those days when the sky was an inferno and burned gum leaves fell on gardens in the inner city, 25km from the nearest blaze, but carried on heat-fed gales that dried jeans on the line to crispiness in minutes.
The other day it was 41.8 degrees (107F) in Hobart, which is 20 degrees above average and the hottest temperature ever recorded there. It was even hotter on the Tasman Peninsula, a place that usually has pretty much the same climate and weather as Canterbury, and is a soft Kentish green.
Now swathes of Tasmania are charcoal, and over a hundred properties have been razed. Ten or fifteen of these are up in Bicheno, near Coles Bay and Freycinet, where the most beautiful walking trails in the world snake through forests of tall eucalypts, past white sand beaches, and granite ranges where giant trees soar up above orchids so small that you will only see them if you walk slowly, and look down.
Now the towns, mostly reliant on tourism and niche products, like jam and venison, are filled with smoke as volunteers fight to save them. The weather has cooled over the weekend, but there is no rain, in a place where there is always rain, and every day and night the fire crews fight to keep the blaze from jumping their lines. Boats are at the ready in the bays. If the roads are cut, people will shelter on them should the town be lost.
On the Tasman Peninsula, the town of Dunalley is smouldering. Sixty-five homes have been lost there, and the school. People who did not get to their cars before the roads were cut off fled to the water, with mothers sheltering with their children under the jetty, and boats taking on as many people as they could before they started to sit too low in the water.
At the moment about 100 people are missing in the area. Most of these will be found alive: there are people sheltering in many parts of the peninsula and power is down, so communications have been patchy. The fire there moved quickly, so people fled with nothing, not even phones, and who carries numbers in their heads these days? The police are searching buildings, but it is slow, and they are sifting through ashes, so it will be a while before they know if anyone was caught. So far there have been no confirmed deaths, and because the Black Saturday fires in Victoria the other year have primed everyone to go as soon as the alert comes, perhaps this time luck will prevail and everyone will be found alive.
Over a thousand people sheltered at Port Arthur. It's a large historic site, that is haunted by its past as a penal colony, and as the site of Australia's worst mass-homicide, where 36 people were killed by a madman with powerful guns. His actions saw automatic and semi-automatic guns banned here, and since then – 1996 – there has not been a single mass-killing by a gunman. Out of something horrible, something good came.
And so it was again. In a place that has seen such anguish, this time there was hope, as emergency services held the roads open and the carparks filled with the vehicles of refugees: many locals with their treasures stuffed into the boot and pets on their laps, but also many tourists, who had expected a quiet camping holiday in the beautiful Tasmanian wilderness.
Tourist ferries ran every hour they could, evacuating all who wanted to go. In Hobart, which is safe, those who have nowhere else to go are camping in public halls. Locals are turning up with food, water, nappies, changes of clothing and toys. And money, because Dunalley is gone, and the sawmill is ash, and that was where most of the jobs were. A family of seven needed to catch a flight to Brisbane from an airport two hours north, and two Taswegians turned up with their cars, happy to be a free taxi service.
Back at Port Arthur, those who didn't want to leave are camping with the staff and locals. They have shelter, food and a place of safety for pets and stock they have brought with them. The children have games supplied, and generators are being shipped down, because the power may take a month to reconnect.
One man shakily said that he had filled the car: goats, dogs and the cat, and got them all out alive. Another, the owner of the sawmill, shook his head and said, 'That's six or seven million dollars gone. And fifty years of my bloody life.' Insurers will pay out, and the government will help, because this is a rich country, but Dunalley will still be a town that is mostly gaps.
Meanwhile, in Port Arthur, cars sit lonely in the carparks. Many of them are rentals. Several rental companies have told those who fled that they will charge them each day until the cars are returned.
On Tuesday, it will be 43 degrees in Sydney. Twenty fires are already burning in New South Wales, but volunteers from here and Victoria have still gone down to Tasmania to help put theirs out. They have family preparing to pick them up from the airport with their kit in the car should they need to do a quick turnaround. Around the country, fire bans are in place, and warning levels are creeping up: Severe, Extreme, Catastrophic.
People in rural and regional areas have made their plans, packed their Go Bags, prepared their stock and kept the pets close. Those of us safe in the cities can smell smoke on the air – hope it's from backburning – and make plans to put a bit of money into the Red Cross this month, and wish never again to have those days when the sky was an inferno and burned gum leaves fell on gardens in the inner city, 25km from the nearest blaze, but carried on heat-fed gales that dried jeans on the line to crispiness in minutes.
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Yay for Aussie spirit.
Devastated I didn't go and see Tasmania in all it's glory before this. Will be sure to go after, and take my tourist dollars to share locally.
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Parts are totally unaffected, it's really quite a big place. But I am hoping that Freycinet is not hit too badly: it's so very beautiful and those animals will have nowhere to run to.
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It reminds me of the climate scientists I saw in an interview talking about studies they did around 2000 that showed they could expect Victorian temperatures to soar by the end of the decade. They actually rounded down from the computer modelling, because they assumed that the predicted maximum 48 was an outlying figure and that they would be better off sticking to a predicted top of 45, which had more data points.
In the lead-up to Black Saturday, of course, it was 48 degrees.
I think the help is going well, I just hope that it's all rescue and recovery and that everyone got out in time.
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It's hard to get them under control without rain, and I am afraid there is no rain due for a while. Of course, traditionally, it will then flood …
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Please, has anyone heard from Snorri?
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No news from Snorri at this point, but if he is on the peninsula, they literally have no power aside from generators: all the lines are out. I'll let you know if I hear anything, the Facebookers might get news earlier, but J says no news there that he knows of.
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In other news, I have Marguerite's Little Cat living down the side of my sofa. I hope she decides to get on with our two by tomorrow, because the rest of us are going to be camping in the study where the small cooler is!
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Even on the other side of the planet this hurts. Sure, no human life may be lost so far, but millions of animals, native and domestic, will be killed. And
Of those that survive, countless more will be injured, or suffer and die from lack of water and feed over the coming weeks. Ancient trees will be lost and never have the chance to be replaced due to human involvement. And Gunns will use it all as an excuse to destroy all the woodland they can.
:(
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I know what you mean: I had little idea of the Australian 'normal' before The Drought hit. For the last few years, people have been saying that the weather has been more what they remember, if wetter, but now it looks as though the dry is back. Drought and Flooding Rains indeed!
What annoys me is when politicians like Abbott say 'Oh, but that's normal' when even old cow cockies in their 90s are saying 'never seen nothing like this, all the old patterns are gone.'
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Amongst all of the destruction, it's heartening to hear of the human kindness. Here's hoping no lives are lost.
*kicks the car rental agencies*
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Today, fishermen and recreational boaties have been doing runs down to the peninsula to deliver food and other supplies, and to help evacuate those who want to leave without cars. Brilliant.
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Thinking of all of those affected, both people and animals, and praying you all get a break in the weather soon. And wanting to smack those politicians in this country *coughRepublicanscough* who say there is no global warming.
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Hoping the cool change on Tuesday night brings rain but no lightening! I've lived in Tassie my whole life and have always loved it because weather like this is so rare.
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And we're sitting in over 40 degrees today, praying that the rest of our Shire doesn't go up in flames. Experts are expecting that the rest of the range that didn't go up last time - all the way out to and around Lake Eildon - to burn this year. And this year we have a bumper season for tourists because the lake is full and the weather hot. I guess a full lake is a good place to take shelter if the worst happens.
I can only feel for the people of Tasmania. Know exactly what they're going through. And pray that everyone makes it out alive. So many lessons have been learned from Black Saturday, but the one thing we cannot and will never get right is how to prevent bushfires altogether. The nature of our forests is that they do need to burn occasionally and history shows that they do. It's what keeps them healthy. It's man's incursions and desire to live in that beauty that puts a human toll on what (in most cases) is a natural phenomenon.
Doesn't make the pain and heatbreak any easier to bear.
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I hadn't even heard of this! I'm so terribly sorry to learn of it now. What an awful tragedy, and I do hope all escaped the fires and are sheltering safely. Keep us posted on any sites where donations may be made.
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I sat here on Friday and Saturday and smelt the smoke and watched the news and I was once again 4 years old and it was 1967, and I watched along with my Mum and sister as a wall of flame fanned by hot winds swept down over the hills behind our house, I remember the noise and the smell and the sheer terror.
I will forever be 4 years old each time there is a day of total fire ban, each time I hear the warning siren and each time I smell the acrid taint of smoke on my nose.
I will forever hear in my memory the sound of my Dad in the aftermath of Black Tuesday over in the bush mercy killing the badly burned animals, each crack of the gun silencing another sad whimper.
Some things you just do not ever forget.
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I'm not an alarmist generally, but I must admit fire scares me - even more now that I have two young children and am responsible for more than just myself! The two 'catastrophic' fire regions for tomorrow are directly to the the north and west of Canberra which is making me very nervous. I think I might pack a bag tonight to keep in the car just in case.
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SO pleased that your friends are safe. So far all of mine are, too, even if a few are yet to check in.
I always think that with fire, unless you have specialist equipment, training and a generator, water source and pump or fireproof bunker, it's best to just go early if there's any risk. Aside from everything else, it means the fire crews can act as a single front rather than having to divert resources to check on people they know are in houses. Make sure you check your local fire station, I know many have logs that people can use to note when they evac and where they go to.
On an unrelated note, watching SBS news and a trainee pilot at one of the regional airports lost a wheel and circled for four hours before putting down having burned off most of his fuel. They had film of him putting the kite down, and he did a REALLY good job, but the thing I loved was the shot of the fire crew member leading him away from the rig and patting him on the shoulder, clearly saying 'That was a really good job, mate!'
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And yes, I'd have been embracing dear old terra firma!
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Just heard that all missing people have been found.
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i'm shocked about the hire companies. of course they're dreadfully affected, too. but the gov surely would step in for that? :(((
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