Winds fan ferocious fires in Australia's most populous state

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
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Go to the local bar and have a beer you will get conscripted, it's a commonwealth law on fighting fires. A citation for no one will be turned down to fight forest fires, common sense will do.
Don't bet on it. Although there are certainly lots of help needed away from the fireline.BC hasn't allowed anyone on the fireline without SP100 for about two decades now, so I expect anyplace other than third world countries have similar rules.
Happened to me. Fight the fire or sit in the pokey until it's out. All I did was keep a pump running for 3 days. I did get paid tho.
 

Twin_Moose

Hall of Fame Member
Apr 17, 2017
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Happened to me. Fight the fire or sit in the pokey until it's out. All I did was keep a pump running for 3 days. I did get paid tho.

Me too the piss pack thing was true, I was 13, Dad was a fire scout, the fire was jumping a fire guard. As I was sitting in dad's truck waiting for him a fire fighter knocked on the window and said there is no sitting on the fire line Lol.
 

AnnaEmber

Council Member
Aug 31, 2019
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Now, now. Don't be silly.



Wel it's a matter of one's own opinion.
Wasn't me being silly. People actually were living in Aus for something like 20,000 years before Europe.And we humans are extremely adaptable to harsh environments. It's Clarkson that's the silly ass.

lol Yep, opinion. Until one can produce definitive evidence of gods, they remain "ifs and maybes".
 

AnnaEmber

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Humanity started off in Europe, not Africa as is commonly believed.

Opinion. lol
 

taxslave

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 25, 2008
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Happened to me. Fight the fire or sit in the pokey until it's out. All I did was keep a pump running for 3 days. I did get paid tho.
How long ago and where? It would have been mid 90s in BC that the MoF told us loggers that we had to have SP100 or we couldn't fight fires in our own setting even. The general concenses make sure the equipment is insured and let her rip.
 

AnnaEmber

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Aug 31, 2019
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And a wrong one at that. But you are talking to the guy that thinks the telephone was invented in England before Mr.Bell was born.
lmao You're kidding? Well, he wouldn't be the first dude that wanted to rewrite history to fit his bias. But I think the first working voice communiction device was from Antonio Muecci (sp?) in Italy, but Bell had the first patented one.
 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
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How long ago and where? It would have been mid 90s in BC that the MoF told us loggers that we had to have SP100 or we couldn't fight fires in our own setting even. The general concenses make sure the equipment is insured and let her rip.
Sometime between 86 to 91 near Trail or Castlegar. Made hundreds of trips back and forth between SK and BC I can't remember which year.
 

Blackleaf

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Oct 9, 2004
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And a wrong one at that. But you are talking to the guy that thinks the telephone was invented in England before Mr.Bell was born.

The telephone was invented by the Brit Alexander Graham Bell.
 

Serryah

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Dec 3, 2008
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Mowich

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Came across this article in the NP today.


Into the fire: Everyone had a choice to make. Would they fight or would they flee?

In 1954, Wolfram Hummel’s father, Helmut, arrived from Germany with $50 in his pocket and a dream to live like a pioneer in the Canadian wilderness. With equal parts self-reliance, passion and grit he built Bear Hill Ranch, a 1,400-hectare mix of cattle-grazing land and harvestable timber along the south shore of François Lake, a long, narrow body of water running east-west in British Columbia’s vast northern Interior.

Last year it was Wolfram, 58, who found himself drawing on those same family characteristics as a massive forest fire bore down on his ranch. As he battled this raging inferno with flames 30 metres high, however, he also found himself tangling with an equally menacing force of government.

At first, provincial authorities simply withheld the resources necessary to fight the fire. Then, when Hummel and his neighbours chose to fight the fire on their own to save their properties, they were ordered to evacuate and let it all burn. Official indifference later shifted to outright hostility when those who defied the evacuation order were faced with authoritative rebukes and outright harassment by law enforcement.

As a deadly wall of flames advanced towards them, residents of François Lake soon found themselves asking: Is our government working for us? Or against us?

The summer of 2018 was a bad one for wildfires in Western Canada. In B.C., over 2,100 fires consumed 1.35 million hectares of forest and fields, and cost taxpayers $615 million. One of the worst started at Nadina Lake in Nadina Mountain Provincial Park, west of François Lake; another began to the south at Verdun Mountain. Driven by strong winds and hot, dry conditions, Nadina’s first treacherous tentacles began licking at the ranch lands on François Lake’s west end by early August, slowly converging on several small, tightly-knit farming communities south of the lake that are home to 1,500 fiercely proud “Southsiders.”

With his ranch in the direct path of the blaze, Hummel set to work saving what his father had built. A bearded and burly giant of a man, he used his ranch’s Caterpillar bulldozer to carve broad swaths of barren fireguards out of the forest in hopes of arresting the fire’s advance. A few like-minded landowners quickly became known collectively as The Wolf Pack.

The Wolf Pack‘s tactics were both disarmingly simple and preposterously daring. “You take the Cats and you push the trees over the overburden, then you put trails in so you can drag through hoses and create escape routes,” says Hummel in an interview. “Then you start putting the fires out. And that’s what we did — we went into the fire.”

Clint Lambert, another Wolf Packer, pushed his bulldozer to 16-hour days as the fire continued its relentless push eastward. On Aug. 22, he was forced to abandon his dozer in the bush after the starter blew. “There were 60-kilometre-an-hour winds; I was getting hit with charcoal shot out of the brush,” he recalls.

Lambert, Hummel and the rest of the Wolf Pack were largely alone in this fight, as B.C.’s Wildfire Service chose to focus its staff and material on priorities elsewhere in the province. As the situation grew more desperate, however, the whole Southside was placed under an evacuation notice. On Aug. 15 residents were told to “leave the area immediately.” Those who ignored the warning — and plenty did — were entirely on their own.

“I’ve never been in a situation in British Columbia where so many people had chosen … to stay behind,” says B.C. Wildfire Service Incident Commander Peter Laing, who headed up the official response to the François Lake fire. Laing met with about a hundred locals at a community hall a few days after the evacuation order. He says it’s the first time he’s ever held a public meeting in an area that was supposed to have been evacuated.

The Southsiders’ stubbornness also briefly caught the attention of B.C. Premier John Horgan, who told reporters anyone who stayed behind was “compromising our ability to address the fire.” Given that they were the only ones actually “addressing” the fire threatening their property, the Wolf Pack responded to the premier’s rebuke in kind.

“They told us not to try to fight the fire. They told us to evacuate, to get out. And I told them to go to Hell,” says the blunt-spoken Hummel. “We’re fighting till the very end.” According to Lambert, government officials and politicians habitually underestimate local abilities to solve local problems. “This isn’t the first wildfire that most of us have ever been in,” he says. “One of the main reasons all of us stayed here on the Southside is that … actual trained people from the forest service just weren’t here.”

“They couldn’t chase us out,” agrees 73-year-old Pixie Robertson, another defiant Southsider. “The police came here twice and said I had to leave ‘because it was going to burn me up.’ ” She, too, was having none of it. “ ‘I’ll take my chances,’ I told them. ‘Get the Hell outta my place.’ ”

Pixie’s stepson Mike Robertson — the business manager of the Cheslatta Carrier Nation, an Indigenous people with 17 small reserves scattered across the Southside — had a panoramic view of the looming disaster from his office near the ferry terminal at Southbank, on the south shore of François Lake. As the Nadina and Verdun fires closed in, the ferry became a vital link to the rest of the world. Working 24 hours a day, MV François Forester ferried a Biblical-scale exodus of cattle and other livestock across the lake to safety on the north side.

As this northward flight was occurring, however, the evacuation order suddenly became something more than just a suggestion as the RCMP set up a roadblock at the north terminal and turned dock access into an enforcement tool. Movement north escaping the flames was unimpeded, but anyone attempting to return to Southbank with fuel or supplies was either denied access or found themselves wasting valuable time pleading for a permit.

“That really put everybody in a bind,” says Mike Robertson. The RCMP had, in effect, imposed a blockade on law-abiding, taxpaying Canadian citizens whose sole transgression was attempting to save their own properties using their own equipment, money and sweat. The Mounties did not to respond to multiple interview requests regarding their tactics on the ferry dock.

Prevented from using the ferry, residents on both sides of François Lake found new ways to keep the fight going. “I dropped my boat in the water and so did many others to help ferry supplies,” says local resident Rex Glanville. A spontaneous Dunkirk-style flotilla of fishing boats and other pleasure craft was thus mobilized to ship fuel and goods across the lake to keep the Wolf Pack supplied.

“It’s crazy that people who want to stay and fight for their homes were treated as if they were under siege,” recalls local Liberal MLA John Rustad. “It was a very unsafe situation.” Rustad himself was granted just one permit to cross on the ferry during the crisis. “I tried to go in several other times but I was denied access,” he recalls.

In another grotesque official attempt at discouraging local efforts to combat the fire, outfitter Catherine Van Tine Marcinek says a provincial conservation officer came to her door requesting that she hand over her dental records. “I asked, ‘My dental records? For what reason?’ He said: ‘So we can identify your charred remains when that wall of fire comes over the hill and takes you.’ ” Van Tine Marcinek stayed regardless, adding: “Who the heck keeps their dental records at home?”

Despite the Wolf Pack’s heroic efforts and that of the many other volunteers who kept them stocked with diesel and food, the inferno continued its inexorable crawl towards the Southside’s communities and farms. By Aug. 29 it crested a steep rock-faced ridge running east-west overlooking the ranch lands. Hummel’s house was now only a few kilometres from the flames. At this point, with the commanding heights in hand, the fire paused.

The fire’s halt on the cusp of its apparent victory over the assembled human combatants was widely considered something of a miracle, although weather and the physics of combustion also played key roles. But as the Wolf Pack buckled down for one last stand, something even more miraculous occurred. The cavalry finally appeared. B.C. Wildfire Service showed up to the fight with water-bucket helicopters on Aug. 30.

“As the fire was becoming a more real threat to their properties, that was when the resources were engaged more,” says Laing matter-of-factly. With several other fires in the province subdued, it was finally the Southside’s turn to receive its share of government assistance.

And as water was now being dumped from the sky, the Wolf Pack was able to meet the enemy head-on. “We were now fighting right in the fire … because we had the air support,” Hummel remembers. By early September, the fire was finally subdued.

Over six weeks, the François Lake inferno had consumed more than 135,000 hectares and destroyed 10 homes. No lives were lost.

And for most of this time, the François Lake Southsiders were virtually alone in facing it down. “The big story is the people who stayed and fought the fires, they literally saved our community from going up in smoke,” Mike Robertson says. “If they hadn’t stayed behind we wouldn’t have anything left. There’s about three or four hundred homes that we would’ve lost.”

Despite such an obvious display of heroism, however, most Canadians have never heard of the Wolf Park, or their monumental stand at François Lake. Had this unfolded in the United States, they’d likely be national heroes, as was the case with the “Cajun Navy,” a spontaneous collection of boats and volunteers mobilized for rescue duty during Hurricane Katrina.

Beyond this lack of personal recognition, however, the Southsiders’ experience at François Lake last year should cause every Canadian to pause and reflect.

Not everyone will agree with the risks the Wolf Pack took last year. Or their rebellious decision to ignore an evacuation order. But their commitment to saving their own property lays bare the unspoken truth that no government can ever deliver continuous and comprehensive protection to all its citizens. Regardless of administrative confidence, or the persistence with which officials seek to dissuade people from solving their own problems, there will eventually come a day when the power goes out, a wildfire rages or some other disaster looms — and government help is nowhere to be found.

And when that time comes, everyone has a choice to make. Do you meekly accept your officially-mandated helplessness and flee? Or do you, like Wolfram Hummel and the Wolf Pack, take matters into your own hands — and head into the fire?

This is a condensed version of “Into the Fire” as originally published by C2C Journal. To read the full version, go to www.c2cjournal.ca

nationalpost.com/opinion/into-the-fire-everyone-had-a-choice-to-make-would-they-fight-or-would-they-flee



 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
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Low Earth Orbit
25+ LOCATIONS ACROSS SOUTH AUSTRALIA HAVE JUST SUFFERED THEIR COLDEST JANUARY DAYS EVER — MAINSTREAM MEDIA SILENT


JANUARY 6, 2020 CAP ALLON
Parts of South Australia have just shivered through some of their coldest January days on record — with Adelaide missing out on beating its 1970 record by just 0.7C.


The temperature at Adelaide’s West Terrace weather station reached just 16.6C on Sunday — about 13C below the average for the time of year, and below the city’s previous lowest January max temp on record, the 17.1C from 1970.

However, because of the controversial way the BOM now measures Australia’s maximum temperatures “as the highest reading during the 24 hours to 9am each day,” an observation of 17.8C at Adelaide’s West Terrace site just before 9am on Monday has gone down as the official max for the 24 hour period.

So Adelaide may have narrowly –and conveniently– missed out, but more than 25 locations across South Australia have just endured their coldest January days on record, as reported by www.adelaidenow.com.au and quietly logged by the BOM.
 

taxslave

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 25, 2008
36,362
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Vancouver Island
Came across this article in the NP today.
Into the fire: Everyone had a choice to make. Would they fight or would they flee?
In 1954, Wolfram Hummel’s father, Helmut, arrived from Germany with $50 in his pocket and a dream to live like a pioneer in the Canadian wilderness. With equal parts self-reliance, passion and grit he built Bear Hill Ranch, a 1,400-hectare mix of cattle-grazing land and harvestable timber along the south shore of François Lake, a long, narrow body of water running east-west in British Columbia’s vast northern Interior.
Last year it was Wolfram, 58, who found himself drawing on those same family characteristics as a massive forest fire bore down on his ranch. As he battled this raging inferno with flames 30 metres high, however, he also found himself tangling with an equally menacing force of government.
At first, provincial authorities simply withheld the resources necessary to fight the fire. Then, when Hummel and his neighbours chose to fight the fire on their own to save their properties, they were ordered to evacuate and let it all burn. Official indifference later shifted to outright hostility when those who defied the evacuation order were faced with authoritative rebukes and outright harassment by law enforcement.
As a deadly wall of flames advanced towards them, residents of François Lake soon found themselves asking: Is our government working for us? Or against us?
The summer of 2018 was a bad one for wildfires in Western Canada. In B.C., over 2,100 fires consumed 1.35 million hectares of forest and fields, and cost taxpayers $615 million. One of the worst started at Nadina Lake in Nadina Mountain Provincial Park, west of François Lake; another began to the south at Verdun Mountain. Driven by strong winds and hot, dry conditions, Nadina’s first treacherous tentacles began licking at the ranch lands on François Lake’s west end by early August, slowly converging on several small, tightly-knit farming communities south of the lake that are home to 1,500 fiercely proud “Southsiders.”
With his ranch in the direct path of the blaze, Hummel set to work saving what his father had built. A bearded and burly giant of a man, he used his ranch’s Caterpillar bulldozer to carve broad swaths of barren fireguards out of the forest in hopes of arresting the fire’s advance. A few like-minded landowners quickly became known collectively as The Wolf Pack.
The Wolf Pack‘s tactics were both disarmingly simple and preposterously daring. “You take the Cats and you push the trees over the overburden, then you put trails in so you can drag through hoses and create escape routes,” says Hummel in an interview. “Then you start putting the fires out. And that’s what we did — we went into the fire.”
Clint Lambert, another Wolf Packer, pushed his bulldozer to 16-hour days as the fire continued its relentless push eastward. On Aug. 22, he was forced to abandon his dozer in the bush after the starter blew. “There were 60-kilometre-an-hour winds; I was getting hit with charcoal shot out of the brush,” he recalls.
Lambert, Hummel and the rest of the Wolf Pack were largely alone in this fight, as B.C.’s Wildfire Service chose to focus its staff and material on priorities elsewhere in the province. As the situation grew more desperate, however, the whole Southside was placed under an evacuation notice. On Aug. 15 residents were told to “leave the area immediately.” Those who ignored the warning — and plenty did — were entirely on their own.
“I’ve never been in a situation in British Columbia where so many people had chosen … to stay behind,” says B.C. Wildfire Service Incident Commander Peter Laing, who headed up the official response to the François Lake fire. Laing met with about a hundred locals at a community hall a few days after the evacuation order. He says it’s the first time he’s ever held a public meeting in an area that was supposed to have been evacuated.
The Southsiders’ stubbornness also briefly caught the attention of B.C. Premier John Horgan, who told reporters anyone who stayed behind was “compromising our ability to address the fire.” Given that they were the only ones actually “addressing” the fire threatening their property, the Wolf Pack responded to the premier’s rebuke in kind.
“They told us not to try to fight the fire. They told us to evacuate, to get out. And I told them to go to Hell,” says the blunt-spoken Hummel. “We’re fighting till the very end.” According to Lambert, government officials and politicians habitually underestimate local abilities to solve local problems. “This isn’t the first wildfire that most of us have ever been in,” he says. “One of the main reasons all of us stayed here on the Southside is that … actual trained people from the forest service just weren’t here.”
“They couldn’t chase us out,” agrees 73-year-old Pixie Robertson, another defiant Southsider. “The police came here twice and said I had to leave ‘because it was going to burn me up.’ ” She, too, was having none of it. “ ‘I’ll take my chances,’ I told them. ‘Get the Hell outta my place.’ ”
Pixie’s stepson Mike Robertson — the business manager of the Cheslatta Carrier Nation, an Indigenous people with 17 small reserves scattered across the Southside — had a panoramic view of the looming disaster from his office near the ferry terminal at Southbank, on the south shore of François Lake. As the Nadina and Verdun fires closed in, the ferry became a vital link to the rest of the world. Working 24 hours a day, MV François Forester ferried a Biblical-scale exodus of cattle and other livestock across the lake to safety on the north side.
As this northward flight was occurring, however, the evacuation order suddenly became something more than just a suggestion as the RCMP set up a roadblock at the north terminal and turned dock access into an enforcement tool. Movement north escaping the flames was unimpeded, but anyone attempting to return to Southbank with fuel or supplies was either denied access or found themselves wasting valuable time pleading for a permit.
“That really put everybody in a bind,” says Mike Robertson. The RCMP had, in effect, imposed a blockade on law-abiding, taxpaying Canadian citizens whose sole transgression was attempting to save their own properties using their own equipment, money and sweat. The Mounties did not to respond to multiple interview requests regarding their tactics on the ferry dock.
Prevented from using the ferry, residents on both sides of François Lake found new ways to keep the fight going. “I dropped my boat in the water and so did many others to help ferry supplies,” says local resident Rex Glanville. A spontaneous Dunkirk-style flotilla of fishing boats and other pleasure craft was thus mobilized to ship fuel and goods across the lake to keep the Wolf Pack supplied.
“It’s crazy that people who want to stay and fight for their homes were treated as if they were under siege,” recalls local Liberal MLA John Rustad. “It was a very unsafe situation.” Rustad himself was granted just one permit to cross on the ferry during the crisis. “I tried to go in several other times but I was denied access,” he recalls.
In another grotesque official attempt at discouraging local efforts to combat the fire, outfitter Catherine Van Tine Marcinek says a provincial conservation officer came to her door requesting that she hand over her dental records. “I asked, ‘My dental records? For what reason?’ He said: ‘So we can identify your charred remains when that wall of fire comes over the hill and takes you.’ ” Van Tine Marcinek stayed regardless, adding: “Who the heck keeps their dental records at home?”
Despite the Wolf Pack’s heroic efforts and that of the many other volunteers who kept them stocked with diesel and food, the inferno continued its inexorable crawl towards the Southside’s communities and farms. By Aug. 29 it crested a steep rock-faced ridge running east-west overlooking the ranch lands. Hummel’s house was now only a few kilometres from the flames. At this point, with the commanding heights in hand, the fire paused.
The fire’s halt on the cusp of its apparent victory over the assembled human combatants was widely considered something of a miracle, although weather and the physics of combustion also played key roles. But as the Wolf Pack buckled down for one last stand, something even more miraculous occurred. The cavalry finally appeared. B.C. Wildfire Service showed up to the fight with water-bucket helicopters on Aug. 30.
“As the fire was becoming a more real threat to their properties, that was when the resources were engaged more,” says Laing matter-of-factly. With several other fires in the province subdued, it was finally the Southside’s turn to receive its share of government assistance.
And as water was now being dumped from the sky, the Wolf Pack was able to meet the enemy head-on. “We were now fighting right in the fire … because we had the air support,” Hummel remembers. By early September, the fire was finally subdued.
Over six weeks, the François Lake inferno had consumed more than 135,000 hectares and destroyed 10 homes. No lives were lost.
And for most of this time, the François Lake Southsiders were virtually alone in facing it down. “The big story is the people who stayed and fought the fires, they literally saved our community from going up in smoke,” Mike Robertson says. “If they hadn’t stayed behind we wouldn’t have anything left. There’s about three or four hundred homes that we would’ve lost.”
Despite such an obvious display of heroism, however, most Canadians have never heard of the Wolf Park, or their monumental stand at François Lake. Had this unfolded in the United States, they’d likely be national heroes, as was the case with the “Cajun Navy,” a spontaneous collection of boats and volunteers mobilized for rescue duty during Hurricane Katrina.
Beyond this lack of personal recognition, however, the Southsiders’ experience at François Lake last year should cause every Canadian to pause and reflect.
Not everyone will agree with the risks the Wolf Pack took last year. Or their rebellious decision to ignore an evacuation order. But their commitment to saving their own property lays bare the unspoken truth that no government can ever deliver continuous and comprehensive protection to all its citizens. Regardless of administrative confidence, or the persistence with which officials seek to dissuade people from solving their own problems, there will eventually come a day when the power goes out, a wildfire rages or some other disaster looms — and government help is nowhere to be found.
And when that time comes, everyone has a choice to make. Do you meekly accept your officially-mandated helplessness and flee? Or do you, like Wolfram Hummel and the Wolf Pack, take matters into your own hands — and head into the fire?
This is a condensed version of “Into the Fire” as originally published by C2C Journal. To read the full version, go to www.c2cjournal.ca
nationalpost.com/opinion/into-the-fire-everyone-had-a-choice-to-make-would-they-fight-or-would-they-flee
Never trust the government when they say they are there to help you.