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This is the bushfire thread so can you keep it free for that please.
Or maybe the attached video is more to the point.This attached link from an author in Australia appeared in Toronto's Globe & Mail. Sure sounds like this horrible fire season will have political consequences for the Australian PM and likely others as well. The author's line about climate change deniers needing to get their excuses ready for their grandchildren down the road is right-on. The huge Brazilian rain forest fires early this year, the increasing ferocity of the annual California wildfires, and the huge forest fires in Western Canada and now these fires in Australia might finally be registering with pollies ....well perhaps not one pollie until his golf course burns or is flooded out by rising seawater.
Opinion: Mourning a disappearing world as Australia burns
Mr Dynon makes some good points and then wrecks it all with his rant about a locked gate that would be fixed with a pair of Bolt Cutters in about 30 secs, i would be pretty sure the RFS have plenty of experience getting through locked gates and would carry the Tools req.Or maybe the attached video is more to the point.
Eastern Australia has had a 4-7 year drought which has exacerbated the fire problems but the intensity of the fires?
Check it out.
Chris Dynon
Mr Dynon makes some good points and then wrecks it all with his rant about a locked gate that would be fixed with a pair of Bolt Cutters in about 30 secs, i would be pretty sure the RFS have plenty of experience getting through locked gates and would carry the Tools req.
OTOH, those gates were locked for a reason, namely to prevent unauthorized access. I do not know how things are Oz, but in the US I strongly believe that if offroaders and other similar folks were not kept out by locked gates and other means, they would end up doing more harm than good. They might possibly help keep access/fire roads clear, maybe. However, there would certainly be more wear and tear on those access and fire roads, as well as trails through an area. Not to mention there would likely be more litter and rubbish, and quite likely more unauthorized campfires or bonfires. In point of fact I suspect that easier access would increase the likelihood of fires breaking out, either as a result of one (or more) idiots starting a fire to sit around at night as they drink and losing control of said fire, or through something like a smoldering cigarette butt getting discarded.I think the rant about locked gates is mainly to do with access to other besides emergency service and or park management, by limiting access means that the trails can become overgrown and therefore limit how far the RFS or other agencies can get to the scene of the fire. access by the off-road community can keep trails open and free from overgrowth which mean easier access to emergency crews.
Good luck and stay safe. Try and find a rum store to shelter inFire coming back for round two in my local area. Been ordered out again, told I have 24 hours to get out of town.
There are some terrible scenes but just be cautious with the maps, there’s a lot of both intended exaggeration and misinterpretation of the true situation.Some photos of the devastation. Truly apocalyptic scenery. I can't help but wonder how much more of this we will see in coming years.
Огненный ад в Австралии: выжженная земля и трупы животных
You have to remember bushfires are a normal part of the Australian environment, the last really big bushfires in 2013 NSW had over 100 fires burning. I’ve lived in the southern highlands south of Sydney for just over 20 years and this is the fifth major fire in that time.Some photos of the devastation. Truly apocalyptic scenery. I can't help but wonder how much more of this we will see in coming years.
Огненный ад в Австралии: выжженная земля и трупы животных
It's a fallacy that global warming is causing the fires. Bad management practices have definitely contributed to their severity and arson has been a causal factor. Climate change has also contributed to their severity because of the increasing mean air and ocean temperatures and the resulting changing weather patterns. In Australia and NZs case there will be increasing longer dry periods punctuated by short extreme wet events. This means more and longer droughts and a drier climate. The science is unequivocal about this and I back the science having worked with it.You have to remember bushfires are a normal part of the Australian environment, the last really big bushfires in 2013 NSW had over 100 fires burning. I’ve lived in the southern highlands south of Sydney for just over 20 years and this is the fifth major fire in that time.
The only real difference about these fires and years past is the influential call of climate change and the media. The severity of the fires I believe is contributed to either the El Niño/ La Niña weather patterns. While I’m all for reducing pollution where we can I’m not convinced in the whole climate change debate