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- 3 July 2009
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It certainly wouldn't hurt for the Federal Government, to ok the RAAF to either purchase an aerial firebomber plane, or convert an ageing Hercules for the purpose. Then it could be deployed to any part of Australia as and when it was required.I would agree on one point, we should have a federal fire army, a green corp with proper hardware
Fire bombing equipment, trucks dozers and maybe these guys could be used during winter months to build fire breaks around NP and handle burn off
NP by design are unpopulated areas the few local RFBs and rangers are so underwhelmed it is not funny yet they have more work to do there than in more agricultural areas.it can not work.it does not
The phenomenon isn't new but understanding its impacts is fairly recent and as you say there's even less known about what drives it.While the PIOD isn't new its not understood what the driver is a few theories still to be proven at the moment CC is not one of them.
I think the minimum rotation is less than 8years from what i have read, so every 8 year minimum, everything must have had a burn offI wonder will the F...wits eventually work out that in Oz we inherited a landscape that MUST be burnt off regularly at least every third winter.
We do Not have the option of saying "it is too wet to burn off" "it is too dry to burn off" the wind is blowing too hard, the wind is not blowing enough etc etc
Just BS excuses and the facts are quite simply this, either we burn off Every winter when it suits us or Nature will do it when it suits Nature.
That is the bottom line, as has been clearly demonstrated this year there are no other options
We had a fire near us yesterday...Cudlee Creek fire...wind pushed it away from us so no real concern.They say caused by a tree falling on power lines.This fire is in an area well cleared with land owners responsible for fuel reduction on their properties.This is enforced.There are a few remnant bush areas on top of hills and hard to get at areas.I believe on a catastrophic day like that no amount of hazard reduction will stop a fire like that.How many homes were lost we will find out today.The other thing that rarely gets a mention is that millions of wild creatures are burnt by these holocausts, in our 2 acres I would estimate we have 12 lizards of various sizes on mainly mowed lawn.
Multiply that by at least 2 in native scrub so 20+ lizards then multiply again by the thousands of acres that have been burnt.
Baby birds in nests, echidnas, wallabies and every single land dwelling creature all sacrificed on the altar of ideology, it is a disgrace.
But you may not have had a so called megafire burning for a month, nor many of the initial startsWe had a fire near us yesterday...Cudlee Creek fire...wind pushed it away from us so no real concern.They say caused by a tree falling on power lines.This fire is in an area well cleared with land owners responsible for fuel reduction on their properties.This is enforced.There are a few remnant bush areas on top of hills and hard to get at areas.I believe on a catastrophic day like that no amount of hazard reduction will stop a fire like that.How many homes were lost we will find out today.
Once you have 90km am hour wind, even a wet moss pit would burn we all agree..well i think we do
By not winter burning we have changed an environment that has existed for thousands of years, the fauna and flora cannot just drive away and come back in a week so they burn to death instead.
What's needed here is a scientific approach rather than an ideological or political one.
Same goes for a lot of things - see what the science says and act accordingly and to hell with the ideological stuff.
Not eons.Very true Smurf, we need to realise that all of the fauna and flora that existed when the white fellas got here had been living with fire for eons, they had adapted and survived.
Up until recent times in most areas of Oz the winter fires continued out of necessity, there were no huge water bombers or such, most bush fire brigades had an old truck which was usually hard to start as it was a hand me down from a somewhere else.
They usually had a smallish water tank on the back and were used to control winter burn offs, no way would you believe that they could actually put out a fire. They could save one house but then they would be empty, the truck near our place did not squirt very far.
By burning off in winter you only have to steer it around any buildings until nightfall, when it cools down overnight you can kill it quite easily. Often they go out by themselves and we would have to relight the next morning to clear a bit more.
Talking to a bloke up at the Undara lava tubes and he was an old bushy, he said that they started to burn off on the first of June and kept relighting it each morning. When they had to put it out themselves they stopped burning as it was now too dangerous.
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