Feb 102009
 

Aus­trali­ans learned so much from the Ash Wed­nes­day bush­fires (I was liv­ing in Mel­bourne at the time and still vis­it as often as I can); there was a sense that although every­one knew bush­fires are capri­cious and dan­ger­ous, that there were things to do to mit­ig­ate them. That all changed this week.

The com­bin­a­tion of years of inad­equate rain­fall, record high tem­per­at­ures, and arson meant there was no escape, no hope for those caught in the bush­fire’s path. There are thou­sands of people out there fight­ing for people and anim­als, hop­ing and pray­ing for the rain that is the only solu­tion. The Aus­trali­an Broad­cast­ing Cor­por­a­tion Mel­bourne news site tells the story. 

I can­’t find the right words to express my sor­row and sym­path­ies for those who lost fam­ily and friends in this hor­rif­ic way. All I can do is point people who want to help to some of the appro­pri­ate ven­ues. There’s the Aus­trali­an Red Cross, the Aus­trali­an Sal­va­tion Army, and some organ­isa­tions to help with anim­als and wild­life.

  2 Responses to “Victorian Bushfires”

  1. Hey Lauren,

    Thanks for the links! The Red Cross link is broken — there’s an extra z at the end.

  2. One of the most inter­est­ing com­ments on the media was from some met­eor­o­lo­gists who said that the run of high tem­per­at­ures (sev­er­al days of 115 degrees at the equi­val­ent lat­it­ude of San Fran­sisco) were so extreme stat­ist­ic­ally that they could not be con­sidered mere out­liers, but hard proof that the game has changed: things are warm­er (and there­fore drier at this stage of the vari­ous ocean­ic Oscil­la­tions Indexes, such as the Pacific el nino/la nina). 

    On the fire danger scale of 0 to 100, these fires rated 320, which means way bey­ond human con­trol: Euca­lypt forests (gum trees) are par­tic­u­larly dan­ger­ous, with the euca­lyptus oil vaporor­ising before explod­ing like nap­alm (if you watch videos, you can see the explo­sions amid the flames), and the flaky bark eas­ily car­ried as burn­ing embers some­times a kilo­met­er ahead of the fire­front. Places like South­ern Cali­for­nia that plant euca­lypts get the same prob­lems: I think, people should really con­sider the wis­dom of non-nat­ive gum trees any­where near habitations. 

    And in Far North Queens­land, there have been ter­rible floods this week. 

    With the eco­nom­ic crisis, the bal­loon is burst­ing and chances are they will sort them­selves out. I don’t see much indic­a­tion from the US media that recov­er­ing from a bubble does not mean return­ing to the bubble: if we find that in fact the US eco­nomy is half the size the US thought it was, then recov­ery involves a sub­stan­tial downs­iz­ing and and rejig­ging of inter­na­tion­al eco­nom­ic power. 

    So what are we to do? On the per­son­al level, the big thing is not to take our hap­pi­ness from things that are eph­em­er­al: our eco­nom­ic suc­cess which can dis­ap­pear because of mad bankers, our nice house which can be burned down, our career which can be robbed by ill­ness or any­thing like that. Those things have to be the icing on the cake, the things we do to help our main goals, our fam­il­ies and friends.

    Thanks for post­ing this blog item, and the links to the Red Cross, Lauren. It is look­ing like the old advice (get our early or stay to save the house: don’t flee on the roads at the last moment) will need to be altered: first, leave early means leave that morn­ing not when you can see fire, and that people who stay will need to put in fire bunkers to shel­ter in: sev­er­al people were saved by shel­ter­ing under­neath floors, behind con­crete stairs and so on. 

    The bush­fire dead give us a heart-break­ing gift, which we dare not not reject if we know what is good for us, of learn­ing how to sur­vive in a hot­ter world. If glob­al warm­ing does con­tin­ue, then many oth­er coun­tries with mar­gin­al eco­sys­tems, such as Aus­tralia has, may also need to learn these new sur­viv­al skills. 

    But people are good at it. We are the cock­roaches that will sur­vive even nuc­le­ar war! The bush­fires are cause for great sad­ness and con­cern, but not des­pair or depression.

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