American reacts to Australia's Worst Bushfire Ever

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  • Опубліковано 24 жов 2023
  • Thanks for watching me, a humble American, react to Ash Wednesday
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 883

  • @mizapril9131
    @mizapril9131 7 місяців тому +300

    Oh my…My dad lost his best man in that fire. He was one of the firefighters caught underneath the Beaconsfield fire truck. Rest in peace Peter Singleton and all the other dear souls who were lost that day. 🙏🇦🇺❤️

    • @barbaraparsons6643
      @barbaraparsons6643 7 місяців тому +23

      also had a close family friend found who died with those firemen a that truck, he lived in Upper Beaconsfield and ran ran toward them help. The wind changed and then they were all trapped. so very sad. And then my daughter who lived in Whittlsea and worked at KIng Lake escaped the Black Friday fires .

    • @Kim_Kardashcam
      @Kim_Kardashcam 7 місяців тому +19

      Bless them all, and prayers for everyone in this coming fire season.

    • @LisaS23N
      @LisaS23N 7 місяців тому +5

      😢 thank you for sharing.

    • @tara-leedawn5509
      @tara-leedawn5509 7 місяців тому +13

      Firefighters are true hero’s. 💜💜

    • @EEmB
      @EEmB 7 місяців тому +2

      ❤🙏😢

  • @Danceofmasks
    @Danceofmasks 7 місяців тому +137

    Never mind ash wednesday, every time an american says "black friday," older australians get PTSD

    • @xyrt99
      @xyrt99 7 місяців тому +8

      Black Saturday. But yeah I was a telecoms engineer at these. Going in afterwards. It was like walking into a wasteland each time afterwards.

    • @Danceofmasks
      @Danceofmasks 7 місяців тому +29

      @@xyrt99 Nope, I'm talking about black friday. The fact that you don't know about it, probably means you're less than 60 years old.

    • @rhyshutchin5
      @rhyshutchin5 7 місяців тому +14

      @@Danceofmasks Not many would know all the events of black friday as it happened in 1939. Most of the people who endured those fires and knew about them at the time would be around 90 years old today if they were kids back then.
      But I'd consider Black Saturday far worse. Far more deaths and injuries.

    • @jencooper3371
      @jencooper3371 7 місяців тому +14

      ⁠@@xyrt99 the Black Friday bush fires were in 1939. My grand mother and her siblings survived by lying in a creek with wet mattresses over them.

    • @Danceofmasks
      @Danceofmasks 7 місяців тому +3

      @@rhyshutchin5 I'm not even 60 years old, and I heard dozens of stories about it. At some point, people would know.
      However, your estimation of damage is flawed. See, if there was a fire in 3000BC that killed 50 people, it would be far worse than today, because the human population is many orders of magnitude larger now, that 50 people is statistically negligible.

  • @hayleyschmaal4232
    @hayleyschmaal4232 7 місяців тому +180

    I don't normally comment, but, My Dad fought in those fires as a very young man in the CFS, he witnessed the death and destruction, and after that he could never stand the smell of cooking pork, it would make him sick. It really affected him, he would always tell us stories and make sure we were bushfire prepared. He passed last year too young from lung disease. This video just reminded me of how much bravery that must have taken. RIP and thanks for your service Dad.

    • @lonelyboy9852
      @lonelyboy9852 7 місяців тому +14

      Hope your doing alright mate, your dad sounds like an amazing man. And yeah it does take a shit tone of bravery to do that and i thank your father with helping.

    • @angelapolykandrites2422
      @angelapolykandrites2422 7 місяців тому +7

      Thank God for people like your father who put their lives on the line. ❤

    • @aaronpcs2
      @aaronpcs2 7 місяців тому +2

      My dad volunteered too

    • @belindahutchinson5333
      @belindahutchinson5333 7 місяців тому

      So sorry for your loss. What an amazing man your dad had been. Thank you 🙏

    • @primategaberocco
      @primategaberocco 7 місяців тому

      And your dad is a legend. 👍

  • @BlessedBe70
    @BlessedBe70 7 місяців тому +43

    Answers to some of your questions.
    1.) Yes, the fires were actually on the Catholic Ash Wednesday.
    2.) Australian bush fires produced their own weather systems. The stronger the fire the more wind it produces and that in turn increases the fire. It is a catch 22 situation.
    The 2 trucks that were caught in the wind change were Narre Warren and Paton Hills. My husband, who was a firefighter in the fires told me that they actually radioed in at told the rest of the firefighters not to come after them. True heroes.

  • @35manning
    @35manning 7 місяців тому +54

    I was a firefighter during the Black Saturday bushfire.
    I was one of many who were awarded the National Emergency Medal.
    The fires were the first time the medals were eligible to be awarded.

  • @grouchogroucho7743
    @grouchogroucho7743 7 місяців тому +131

    As a past volunteer rural firefighter, I’d say that it depends on how you classify the “worst ever”. Number of lives lost? Area burned? Number of dwellings destroyed? Number of livestock killed? Cost? A combination of all of these?
    There have been plenty of terrible bushfires over the last couple of hundred years. One of the big reasons is that when Europeans arrived, traditional burning practices disappeared along with the local Aboriginal tribes as they were pushed off the land. Europeans tended to let forests just grow or clear fell, there wasn’t much in between.
    We are slowly learning to re-introduce these practices with the help of Indigenous advisors. There’s a long way to go but it is happening and where it is done right, the bushfire season is much more manageable.
    Here is just a short selection of other past fires:
    1851 - 12 dead - two thirds of the state of Victoria burned to ash
    1898 - 12 dead - 2000 homes destroyed in Victoria
    1926 - 60 dead - 1000 homes destroyed in Victoria
    1939/40 - 71 dead - 3700 homes destroyed in Victoria
    1967 - 62 dead - 1293 homes destroyed.

    • @jameswoodbridge668
      @jameswoodbridge668 7 місяців тому +27

      2009 - Black Saturday - 173 lives lost

    • @davidareeves
      @davidareeves 7 місяців тому +12

      I grew up with grandparents telling us of these old fires. My father being an MMBW caretaker in the mountains, most of our chores on weekends was either making sure the fire break around our house was maintained and clear. Other weekends would be spent helping fell trees and removal of debris around the eastern water ways. For us is was fun getting chance to be in charge of the chainsaws, or ride on mowers etc. We were well trained, as a kid can be, to be firesafe and prepared.
      I remember a night during the Ash Wednesday fires, a lightning strike missed the Liquid Chlorine (30,000 liters) shed by a few hundred meters and a new fire front had started. The old lady had to be coaxed away from her home as the helicopter tried to maintain a break as the fire truck tried to get there. She was, oh laddie, it's only a couple sparks it'll be fine, back in '26 or '39, now they were a fire. Thankfully, her house and the shed was saved, that would not have been pretty if the shed went up

    • @Merrid67play
      @Merrid67play 7 місяців тому +8

      They usually mean human lives lost for "worst". But it's an arbitrary measure at best.

    • @MargaretLangley
      @MargaretLangley 7 місяців тому

      Actually Europeans did clear the dead underbrush in the forests until the stupid greens and Labour party stopped this happening .The worst bushfires were in the 1800s Two thirds of Victoria was burned out.The difference today is people are building in bushfire prone areas.
      I quote a poem by Dorothy McKeller
      I love a sunburt country.
      A land of sweeping .
      Of rugged mountain ranges
      Of droughts and flooding rain
      I love he far horizon
      I love her jewel sea
      Her beauty and her terror
      The wide brown land for me.
      We have cyclones, not hurricans.

    • @jade7249
      @jade7249 3 місяці тому

      You forgot the fires in Hobart in the 60s and all the other deadly fires in Australia example the blue mountains bushfire

  • @unsub0007
    @unsub0007 7 місяців тому +103

    Majority of our firefighters are also volunteers who leave their families and risk their lives to fight fires.

    • @kerrygould6676
      @kerrygould6676 7 місяців тому +8

      Yes our Volunteer Fire Fighters are up around the 70,000 mark which makes it the biggest in the world. They are our absolute heroes.

    • @tnytyson
      @tnytyson 7 місяців тому +2

      Our volunteers fire brigade rock

    • @StormTalara
      @StormTalara 7 місяців тому

      Honestly can’t count the number of times i’ve ran out the door instead of sitting down for the meal just ready to eat. And I’m in a relatively “quiet” area. I truly commend those in busier/urbanised areas.

    • @sventer198
      @sventer198 7 місяців тому

      👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻

  • @MajorMalfunction
    @MajorMalfunction 7 місяців тому +42

    I was 12. We lived in a growing western Melbourne suburb in the grasslands. The fire came right up to the very edges and burnt some of the fences. Everyone was out with hoses and buckets defending their property. The smoke was so thick you could barely see your feet. The wind was so strong there were whole branches ON FIRE raining down from the sky from the forest 5km away.
    My Dad and I had swimming goggles on, and wet towels around our heads. Dad was on the hose wetting the roof, and I was running around the backyard with buckets and pots my Mum was filling in the kitchen sink and bath, putting out the burning debris raining in our yard.
    The next day, half the trees in the street had blown down, even been blown DOWN the street. It was a big clean up. A day I'll certainly never forget.

  • @Darryl_Frost
    @Darryl_Frost 7 місяців тому +82

    I was in the Australian Navy at the time, I went and help fight these fires. Hardest work I have ever done over a few days. Still many strong memories of that time.

    • @TheMschipp
      @TheMschipp 7 місяців тому +13

      thank you for your hard work mate!

    • @musicalneptunian
      @musicalneptunian 7 місяців тому +3

      That's interesting. Were you based at HMAS Cerberus? I never thought of the Navy helping out. As someone who lived through Ash Wednesday in outer SE Melbourne thank you!

    • @theimperfectscrapper5313
      @theimperfectscrapper5313 7 місяців тому +3

      Legend mate!

    • @Darryl_Frost
      @Darryl_Frost 7 місяців тому +5

      @@musicalneptunian I can't remember I may have been at HMAS Nirimba, or possibly on the SWAN by then. It was not the only one I went too either. I went to the big one in the Vic snow fields (Mt Bright ?? ). We were used to mainly cut fire breaks. (and 'blacking out'). With out rakehoe's.
      Thanks for your replay.

  • @awf6554
    @awf6554 7 місяців тому +26

    My brigade lost 5 members on Ash Wednesday and it had a big impact on our small town. Every year, we have a sundown memorial service at the bush setting where they were lost.
    Back then fire trucks were petrol rather than diesel. Not only were they more flammable, but the fuel could evaporate in the lines in the heat, stalling the engine. That happened as the truck was ascending a steep track, and the fire caught up with them.

  • @Kim_Kardashcam
    @Kim_Kardashcam 7 місяців тому +16

    Australian Rural Volunteer Firefighters are legends. When called they leave their homes and jobs immediately, and in severe circumstances, fight incredible blazes for weeks on end to help the community in some cases leaving their own homes to burn

  • @hothead2306
    @hothead2306 7 місяців тому +30

    The Christian Ash Wednesday happens 6.5 weeks before Easter so between 4th Feb and 11th March. The bushfires were a series of bushfires that occurred in south-eastern Australia in 1983 on 16 February, which was the Christian holy day Ash Wednesday in that year.

    • @belindahutchinson5333
      @belindahutchinson5333 7 місяців тому

      Australia didn’t celebrate the Catholic Ash Wednesday..

    • @cgkennedy
      @cgkennedy 7 місяців тому

      ​@@belindahutchinson5333Most practising Catholics do.

  • @darrenashley126
    @darrenashley126 7 місяців тому +37

    I remember that day well. I was pulled out of school by my stepdad because I was the only one who could call the horses. The fire ended up 1 -2 feet from our bottom fence and the wind changed direction saving our property, the neighbours all lost property and livestock. It was awful. The 2019-2020 fires bought it all back.

    • @EEmB
      @EEmB 7 місяців тому

      💔

  • @tammymcleod4504
    @tammymcleod4504 7 місяців тому +57

    I live in Cockatoo, which was mentioned in the video. It was one of the hardest hit in those fires. Been here for 10 years now, so I wasn't here when the fires went through, but I tell you what, many of us don't refer to spring and summer here, it's 'bushfire season' instead. There are residents who lived through the fires here who still suffer from PTSD over the Ash Wednesday fires. Women and children sheltered in the kindergarten the day of the fires, and that kindergarten was spared, and is now a memorial and bushfire education centre. Cockatoo's a beautiful place to live, but, with that beauty, comes the danger of bushfires. Nowadays, we have a lot of ways to help if there are fires. I stayed home when the Gembrook/Bunyip fires went through in 2019, and, although it was pretty hairy, I kept an eye on all the apps... Vic Emergency app, Vic Fires, wind direction apps, the radio scanner that catches the CFA broadcasts, stuff like that, and, of course, had the car packed up ready to go (my car is usually packed up with necessities from mid spring to mid autumn should I need to evacuate). You need to have a good fire plan in place just in case the shit does hit the fan.

    • @heatherwardell2501
      @heatherwardell2501 7 місяців тому +7

      We lived at Emerald up there and had to evacuate too. We were lucky though. Our house was up for, it didn't help that much

    • @huntz3215
      @huntz3215 7 місяців тому +4

      My brother was stuck on my Grandparents farm towards Mt Burnett, they had spot fires to put out. Lucky to have avoided the worst of it. I remember work collegues leaving to go home n release horses or evacuate there families.

    • @harperr2180
      @harperr2180 7 місяців тому +10

      We watched from a look out/dam in the Dandenongs as we were tying to figure out what to do and we saw a fireball go through cockatoo. It was horrifying, we had friends who lost homes some with houses left standing while everything else was gone. We moved out of the hills and when Black Saturday happened I found myself totally shaken from the smell of the smoke and I realised how much it had impacted us through the years.

    • @skwervin1
      @skwervin1 7 місяців тому +9

      I remember that a brave young man, 18 I think and an older gentleman stayed on the roof of the kindergarten with hoses, constantly wetting it down while the fire raged around them. If not for their efforts, those sheltering inside would have died.

    • @papadingo
      @papadingo 7 місяців тому +1

      We were visiting my wife's sister in Trafalgar during that time, and drove through Cockatoo to visit an elder aunt of mine in Mansfield.
      It was literally just a couple of hours after we drove through Cockatoo that it was almost completely gone. There wasn't any fire there when we drove through. That's just how fast that for was.

  • @nathanhallisey441
    @nathanhallisey441 7 місяців тому +15

    I was a member of the Narre Warren fire brigade from 2008 to 2019. The total loss of Narre Warren and Panton Hill tanker during Ash Wednesday is still remembered. There is a photo of Narre Warren getting the keys to their new truck. Days later it and six members were lost. RIP.

  • @nolasyeila6261
    @nolasyeila6261 7 місяців тому +28

    There were some incredible satellite shots taken showing the extent of the fires over the country in January 2020. Sadly, there are many articles saying "worst fire in Australian history", or words to that effect, with successive dates as each seems to surpass the last. And haunting images of burnt koalas and other animals, survivors but terrible burns. RIP to all those lost. Salute to the firefighters.

    • @WraithReaper09
      @WraithReaper09 7 місяців тому +3

      Those fires started end of September 2019 and burned into March 2020. The country burned for around 6 months.

  • @terben7339
    @terben7339 7 місяців тому +11

    In South Australia, this fire is Called Ash Wednesday II. There had been a fire 3 years earlier, which had been named the Ash Wednesday fire. This earlier fire was renamed Ash Wednesday I after 1983.
    One thing not mentioned in the video was that the temperature that day was in excess of 43°C. (~110°F)

    • @alphgeek
      @alphgeek 7 місяців тому +1

      The whole prior two weeks was oppressive, most days at or near 40. We were on severe water restrictions, it hadn't rained for months. Mt Macedon, Vic.

  • @joriley7543
    @joriley7543 7 місяців тому +21

    Have a look at Black Saturday on the 7th February 2009 in Victoria Australia. There were 173 deaths in that one. It was horrific.

  • @datwistyman
    @datwistyman 7 місяців тому +14

    I live in the South Burnett region of Queensland and about 150kms to 200kms away from me near the town of Tara there are crazy bushfires happening right now, yesterday there was 2 people dead and a few homes destroyed. Have watched the news yet today but I'm betting the it's gotten a lot worse.

    • @mikeyhau
      @mikeyhau 7 місяців тому +3

      I'm heading to the western Downs region on Saturday to help with recovery efforts. There are hundreds of people displaced by the fires and they need basic services. Luckily my little bit won't involve me in fighting the beast, I'll just be helping people get through the consequences. I take my hat off to the brave people who do the real hard and dangerous work, on the fire fronts. It is always sad to see the consequences of disaster but it also makes me proud of all the brave people as well as the ordinary people who step forward to help.

  • @ladylynnmaree
    @ladylynnmaree 7 місяців тому +23

    This Ash Wednesday Bushfires destroyed my home town. I attended a 40th commemorative anniversary this February, and it was mentioned that this was the first of the climate change fires. This fire didn't behave like traditional fires, so many cha ges were made in how to approach fire fighting.

    • @fugawiaus
      @fugawiaus 7 місяців тому +1

      So all the other previous fires weren’t climate change but this one was?
      You do realise how silly that sounds don’t you.
      Australia has a long history of massive bushfires on record going back to 1788 and aboriginal memory a hell of a lot further but this one was climate change?
      Riiiiiight

    • @ladylynnmaree
      @ladylynnmaree 7 місяців тому +1

      Tell that to the head of the CFA and all the representatives from each fire stations involved in Ash Wednesday that was present at the official event. Their words not mine, but I was there in 1983 and I agree with them.

    • @fugawiaus
      @fugawiaus 7 місяців тому

      @@ladylynnmaree how about you use your own brain cells for once.
      Thousands of years of bushfire history but this single one was climate change. There was a fire in the early 1900s that burnt out 2/3 of Victoria which was natural. All before it were natural and all the bush fires after were natural until 1983 which was climate change all of a sudden. Haha
      By the way…
      Not the CFAs words, your words. The words climate change didn’t exist until the early 2000s, it was global warming and few even mentioned it until the 90s, it was a fringe thing by early computer modellers. Previous to that it was global cooling throughout the 70s to early 80s.
      So no, they didn’t.

  • @Peter-wj1lp
    @Peter-wj1lp 7 місяців тому +6

    I remember as a teen living in Adelaide, looking up at the hills in the evening and seeing the tops of the hills on fire. What a devastating day for south Australia and Victoria.

  • @barryduffman9467
    @barryduffman9467 7 місяців тому +14

    Volunteer Rural Fire Service member here. Couple of points that may interest you.
    The blankets are standard issue on all trucks and when it is very hot outside, the blankets are put up inside (not the windscreen, obviously) to lessen the effect of radiant heat. I have been on trucks, used the blankets, get clear of the fireground and then inspect the truck to find heaps of the plastic attachments (door handles and such) melted.
    Another interesting point is that one of the trucks was using its windscreen wipers as there was water hitting the windscreen.
    It is not raining. All trucks have overspray sprinklers that can wet down the trucks going through "warmish" areas lol.

  • @Di_678
    @Di_678 7 місяців тому +9

    G'day Ryan. I remember Ash Wednesday. I live at the foot of the Dandenong Ranges in Melbourne. I had a friend who was evacuated and they lost half the house and horses. It was horrific.
    P.s. Our Aussie Fire fighters went to help in the California fires. 👍

  • @carokat1111
    @carokat1111 7 місяців тому +17

    It's not our only bad fire. 64 people died in Tasmania in the February 1967 fire and the psychological scars still remain for many older people I know. Sadly, there have been plenty of other bad ones too. Australia has cyclones.

    • @russellbell1752
      @russellbell1752 7 місяців тому +5

      Most cyclones happen in the northern parts of Australia, on the northern coasts of Queensland, Western Australia and in the Gulf of Northern Territory. The most noticeable one being Cyclone Tracy that hit Darwin on Christmas Day. Other areas do get some (or the tail end of cyclones) but this isn't as often as the previously mentioned areas.

    • @AndyViant
      @AndyViant 7 місяців тому +1

      My parents moved from Hobart to Melbourne after those fires.
      Little did they know what they were getting into.

    • @jade7249
      @jade7249 3 місяці тому +1

      I remember Hobart's fire only too well worrying about family and friends hoping they got out safely I'm from Lonnie

  • @pieman2656
    @pieman2656 7 місяців тому +10

    What people need to remember is when you stand in front of a radiant heater you can feel it and it is only 2KW per hour. Bush fires can exceed 50KW per square meter even higher when oils from Eucalyptus and pine reach flashpoint and radiant heat goes a good distance. Yesterday Ryan showed videos of fire trucks driving through the fire and you hear a call put the blanket up. The radiant heat coming into the cab cooks everything so you put a barrier in the way. Keep up the good work ex volunteer, some called us the Jolly Volley's but there is a time where we all pitch in. Cheers from over the ditch in New Zealand.

  • @kathaRoo
    @kathaRoo 7 місяців тому +9

    I was in the middle of Ash Wednesday. On the news the said no houses were left standing in our road which scared our family in the city. Phone lines were out for days so no one knew if we were alive. The closest town to us lost 535 houses and buildings and 27 lives. We spent the night in the middle of a paddock my dad had plowed watching the fire 360* around us! I remember the night like it was yesterday

  • @karenr1688
    @karenr1688 7 місяців тому +13

    My husband was a volunteer and fought this fire. My husband and another volunteer was left out all night because the fire truck forgot about them and left so they were out till they were picked up in the morning. He said it was the scariest night of his life! 😮

    • @heatherwardell2501
      @heatherwardell2501 7 місяців тому +6

      Oh no!

    • @StormTalara
      @StormTalara 7 місяців тому +1

      Sounds like what happened to my dad with the helicopter one time. Got dropped into deep bush and heli got called away and never came back for them. Had to hike 20km to get out.

    • @karenr1688
      @karenr1688 7 місяців тому

      @@StormTalara It sounds crazy! But it does happen 😮

  • @wdazza
    @wdazza 7 місяців тому +17

    Eucalyptus trees have leaves that contain eucalyptus oil which is very flammable and so they burn even when they are still green. The Blue Mountains are blue because of the oil produced by the leaves and which enters the air. This is a bit like the blue smoke produced from the exhaust of a car that is burning oil because of a damage piston ring.

    • @competitionglen
      @competitionglen 7 місяців тому +2

      And the strong wind just blows that much more oxygen to feed the fire

  • @rolla5731
    @rolla5731 7 місяців тому +14

    Worst fire in australia by far is the kinglake fires 173 ppl, 120 were from kinglake alone, 3500 buildings including 2000 homes were burnt to the ground, and this is why we now live in beautiful port macquarie 😊

    • @Aquarium-Downunder
      @Aquarium-Downunder 7 місяців тому +1

      Port Macquarie was lots of fun in 2019/20

    • @rolla5731
      @rolla5731 7 місяців тому +1

      @@Aquarium-Downunder once the fires stopped it was, we moved from the fires and they followed us 😔

    • @Aquarium-Downunder
      @Aquarium-Downunder 7 місяців тому +1

      @@rolla5731 I would like to name a place in Australia that you are safe from fires, but I know better.

    • @angelapolykandrites2422
      @angelapolykandrites2422 7 місяців тому +1

      Indeed, the kinglake fires were absolute hell, I agree they were the worst. RIP to all those who perished.

  • @thatfelladownunder9396
    @thatfelladownunder9396 7 місяців тому +9

    I was in the Army in Central Victoria in ‘83 and myself and my housemates were watching the fires in tv, which were a fair way south from us. And it was bizarre because I looked at my mates and said “ I can smell it!” We went outside (nighttime) and could see the smoke haze around the streetlight. A dear family friend and an old schoolmate were killed when their fire truck was overrun in SA. Where I’m from. The Adelaide hills, again, where I’m from originally burned in both 1978 and 1983. Devastating.

  • @davidius74
    @davidius74 6 місяців тому +1

    Being from Adelaide, I was in primary school when the fire started near Mt Lofty. It was such a hot day that we got sent home from school early. I remember watching channel 9 news that night with Rob Kelvin reporting on location down the street from his home and while he was broadcasting he watched as his house burnt down. Later that night as you looked up towards Mt Lofty you could see a ring of fire in the hills. While that looked great at night, the destruction it caused was not and the smoke made it hard to breathe even as the fires pushed further east and were contained closer to Adelaide. There is a museum at Mt Lofty dedicated to the fire and yes as others have said it did occur on the catholic Ash Wednesday.

  • @infin8ee
    @infin8ee 7 місяців тому +5

    Although it's beautiful to live in the bush fire is certainly a very real factor. Respect and many thanks to everyone who has ever or will ever be involved in helping to "fight" fire. I know we're all worried for this summer as the death toll has already started with the fire's currently burning. Prayers to everyone involved

  • @threestumps7560
    @threestumps7560 7 місяців тому +9

    Hey Ryan, Ash Wednesday is one of many bad bushfires we have had in Victoria. The Aireys Inlet and Lorne area mentioned in the video really hits home to me. In history, other parts of Australia have also had their own bushfire disasters: Black Tuesday (Tasmania, 1967), Black Sunday (Sth Aust, 1955), Black Friday (Victoria, 1939), Black Saturday (Victoria, 2009) and Black Summer (nationwide, 2019/20) amongst many other. My grandparents use to talk about Black Friday when they were young. My parents talk about Ash Wednesday and I will talk about Black Saturday.

    • @allenjones5525
      @allenjones5525 7 місяців тому +1

      I remember my ex brother in law talking his experiences in Airey's Inlet in 83. He said when he saw the flywire screens on the windows melting to liquid with the heat he decided to abandon the house and head to the beach. If he had not he would have died as the house was totally destroyed

    • @oceanapearl3503
      @oceanapearl3503 7 місяців тому

      I'll forever associate Summer with smoke.

  • @jessovenden
    @jessovenden 7 місяців тому +5

    Eucalyptus trees are full of oil that’s highly flammable.
    California has lots of eucalyptus trees, imported from Australia I think.
    So do most of the many places in the world that had bushfires this year.
    Please somebody correct me if I am wrong.

    • @becsutherland4506
      @becsutherland4506 7 місяців тому +1

      I was in Albania and was so surprised to see eucalypts. They planted them to deal with salinity from memory.

    • @jackvos8047
      @jackvos8047 7 місяців тому +1

      They release the oil into the air as a survival mechanism in case of fire. A fast burning fire is better for the tree than a slow one as a slow burning fire has more chance of killing the tree by turning it into charcoal. I think it is that they release more oil into the air the hotter it gets.

    • @jackvos8047
      @jackvos8047 7 місяців тому +1

      ​@@becsutherland4506I saw somewhere years ago that Israel was planting them for much the same reason.

    • @juliejefferies291
      @juliejefferies291 7 місяців тому +1

      They also regenerate after fire - they rise up from the ashes literally. Most Australian native plants needs fire to germinate their seeds. So about a month after a bushfire when you drive past again you see all this green vegetation, it is actually beautiful

  • @duncandownham4726
    @duncandownham4726 7 місяців тому +9

    My condolences to those affected by past fires (and those in the future). Respect to the firefighters that battle the bushfires, legit heroes. Could be a rough one this season, stay as safe as you can people.

  • @Pavlovaboi38
    @Pavlovaboi38 7 місяців тому +7

    I remember this, my mum was in a school bus with her class going at full speed to the allocated meeting spot, the fire litteraly went over the bus and the people in the car behind them sadly died. She remembers being at school with her friend and looking over at the hills and they where ALL burning they thought it was dust, there was ash falling over them and they where out aying in it because they didn't know what it was. That story still terrifies me.

  • @Caleb_JayySRL
    @Caleb_JayySRL 7 місяців тому +1

    Well in Australia, we don’t get tornados, but we do get something I like to call ‘leaf swirlies’ but it’s not like tornados it’s just an abrupt change in direction of the wind, making it so there’s residual gust in the opposite direction influencing each other

  • @dee-smart
    @dee-smart 7 місяців тому +5

    The way they fight bushfires is to put in breaks and hope to slow down and halt the spread of the area. Containing it in one specific area and not allowing it to move on. However when the winds are rapid fires jump massive distances and it is virtually impossible to stop the spread. That is why fires can rage not just hours and days, but weeks and months, like the last big one we had in 2019/2020. Also gum trees (eucalyptus) fuel the fires too. They are prevalent in the Australian bush and are the main food source for koalas.

  • @vtbn53
    @vtbn53 7 місяців тому +4

    Wish me luck Ryan, we are just heading into our fire season here and it looks like being a bad one, in 2019 the fires reached within a hundred yards of my house, I had to evacuate 15 times and one night I gave up on my house only to wake in the morning to find those beautiful magnificent firies had stopped the fire in it's tracks just 100 yards away, unbelievable courage and determination. Sadly at least 12 houses in my village and surrounds were lost.

    • @duncandownham4726
      @duncandownham4726 7 місяців тому +3

      Good luck, I too am worried about the new season. Where I live is pretty safe, but my heart goes out to those who aren't. Looks terrifying, and good on the brave people that fight those fires

    • @vtbn53
      @vtbn53 7 місяців тому +2

      @@duncandownham4726 Thank you very much, yes they are incredibly brave people but also are incredibly nice people, I noticed two firies in the vacant lot next door (hazard checking I assume) and I asked them if they could comment on the fire prep work I had been doing. They both jumped over the fence and spent at least an hour with me going over the house and property telling to do this and do that, so very very helpful (this was my first bushfire situation BTW so knew basically nothing.).

  • @user-ll7nl5to7p
    @user-ll7nl5to7p 7 місяців тому +4

    We are still putting out fire on our property as we speak. My husband and I live in Millmerran Downs Qld and have had a horrific few days. Scary, scary stuff. All hail our fire fighters, our modern day superheroes.

  • @c8Lorraine1
    @c8Lorraine1 7 місяців тому +3

    The worst fires took place in 2019/20. Over a billion animals killed some species wiped out. 100s people killed including firefighters who came over from Canada to help us. They returned home in coffins. The fires in 2009 in Victoria took out a whole town, people weren’t given notice to evacuate.

    • @benjaminlloyd-martin4339
      @benjaminlloyd-martin4339 7 місяців тому

      i was just thinking the same. there was the town where they all had to jump into the water at the beach, a team was trying to protect the wollemi pine. i swear we called it black summer?

  • @stephenhoward8433
    @stephenhoward8433 7 місяців тому +3

    Mate black Saturday in 2009 is by far the worst. Maybe not in total area but definitely worst in terms of the ferocity and devastation. Some heartbreaking stories from that day

  • @jenniferharrison8915
    @jenniferharrison8915 7 місяців тому +9

    Happy Arvo Ryan! 😯👍 Yes, it's the name of a religious day! 🤔 This is horrifying! 😵 Great to hear the video commentary is in a genuine Aussie accent! The loss of communication must have been really devastating and very stressful! The poor defenseless animals, what a horrible thought! 😪 Yes, the noise of a big fire is terrifying, the heat, the smell! 😳😭

  • @whisperslmao798
    @whisperslmao798 7 місяців тому +1

    I was a volunteer at this time at the local RSPCA (animal shelter), it was devastating time for our vets with the amount of animals that had survived the fire but needed to put down. So much devastation for every one who lost every thing.

  • @gavinmclean3174
    @gavinmclean3174 Місяць тому

    This was my first big fire in the CFA and very lucky to have very experienced people around me that managed to keep the team safe, this also changed the trucks we now use so we have a chance to survive if we are over run by the fire front.

  • @TracyFromAus
    @TracyFromAus 7 місяців тому +1

    I lived in Cockatoo at the time of the fires, our house burnt the ground in 4 minutes. the only thing recognisable was an IceCube tray and the garden hose!

  • @amandamoroni9584
    @amandamoroni9584 7 місяців тому +3

    There have been so many devastating fires in southern Australia, currently NSW coast is burning and the rest of Southern Australia is bracing for another bad bushfire season. I lived in Bendigo during black friday and was part of the clean up around king lake which was one of the towns wiped out ..... Absolutely heartbreaking and something I'll never forget

  • @bigs1546
    @bigs1546 7 місяців тому +5

    These types of fires used be periodic with recovery and re-greening time in between - now they happen regularly. I can remember the 1968 Blue Mountains bushfires which burnt uncontrolled for almost 70 days with 5 days of absolute terror. 14 people killed, over 250 million acres destroyed. Grey ash fell on Sydney for days like it was snow. Cars were catching fire on the highway trying to escape - it was terrifying as a 10 year old .......... we lived in the outer Western Sydney and wondered when it would come down to us. The fires made it to Terrey Hills. It just happens more frequently now and I believe that Australia is one of the "canary in the coal-mine" countries for global climate change - and now we see unprecedented weather events happening globally.

  • @Shattered65
    @Shattered65 7 місяців тому +2

    I had a friend that was part of the crew from Panton Hill that died when their tanker was burned. He survived because he was late getting home from work that afternoon and the tanker went out without him. The trauma he suffered at the loss of his friends was devastating and has had a terrible toll on the rest of his life.

  • @alphgeek
    @alphgeek 7 місяців тому +5

    10:30 Our house at Mt Macedon burned down on Ash Wednesday when I was 12yo. I still remember it like yesterday. We thought the risk had passed by late evening so we were having a late dinner around 10pm. Nobody realised that the wind changed and was blowing the fire towards us in a huge front.
    My first realisation was what I thought was rain hitting the roof - strange given it had been dry for months. I went to take a look and saw the sky filled with glowing embers. I jumped out of my skin. We were in the car and leaving within two minutes and ended up driving out in a logjam of cars with fires on both sides. We spent the night with dozens of others at a huge house in Woodend. We went back the next day and the only building standing within 500m of where our home had been was the CFA station.
    I also remember the dust storm that preceded the fire, I was at school when we heard and they sent the whole school home early. I was at home when it came through. We'd also had a another fire a week before THAT in which my Aunt's fancy house with huge gardens had burned.

    • @glenod
      @glenod 7 місяців тому

      my mum and dad had friends there, jim and rose mackilhose, their house was spared, each house next door was gone.

  • @andrewporrelli8268
    @andrewporrelli8268 7 місяців тому +1

    Here's irony. Watching your today's video about bushfires, from Nymboida. Where we have had a big bushfire today get put out by rain, on next doors property. We would have been next!
    Our street and town was burnt out in 2019. 85 homes destroyed in our village. So far this fire, no main buildings lost. Yesterday was a day from hell. Aussie fire fighters are insanely commited!! Should be paid or given medals for that shit right there!

  • @pcole1232
    @pcole1232 17 днів тому

    The dust storm moved right across all Australian states,cities and towns, country NSW was affected. The dust storm came through our town. I heard a loud noise outside, so I opened the front door it was the wind, all I could see was a huge rolling cloud of brown dust. I quickly closed the door, put towels across the bottom of the doors and windows. I was hoping and praying that my home wouldn't be blown away. It so eerie.

  • @googleuser__1416
    @googleuser__1416 7 місяців тому

    I went through Ash Wednesday, as a 5yo and lived not far from Cockatoo. I still remember the sound of the fire coming over the hill. I will never forget it.

  • @jasonfield8823
    @jasonfield8823 7 місяців тому +4

    I used to be a volunteer fire fighter. These kinds of fires happens nearly every summer here.

    • @benjaminlloyd-martin4339
      @benjaminlloyd-martin4339 7 місяців тому

      and it's getting worse, from a casual observer. parts of tassie went up in flames during 2019-2020 that don't normally have fires

  • @gamortie
    @gamortie 7 місяців тому +1

    0:51 it did happen on the ecclesiastical Ash Wednesday. I was in my first year of high school, and, due to my involvement in and proximity to the local Salvation Army, I was involved in the distribution side of relief efforts.

  • @suzannesmith1805
    @suzannesmith1805 7 місяців тому

    Fire here in rural Australia is a major concern we spend weeks preparing. I am always in awe of the volunteers as they do this for free. Both my husband and I have in the past have been involved as volunteers.

  • @snakezdewiggle6084
    @snakezdewiggle6084 7 місяців тому +1

    Anyone notice that we (Aussies), very rarely speak of bush fires.
    Heart felt thanks to all the men and women, past and present.
    We will never forget.

  • @claytonjones897
    @claytonjones897 7 місяців тому

    Ryan - for context Black Saturday burnt out 450,000 hectares - in perspective draw a line from Thorntown to Mooresville across to Shelbyville, up to Anderson and back to Thorntown - anything in that square was just gone.
    Thanks to anyone who puts their community before thier safety to fight bushfires - they are all hero’s in my book!!

  • @helenlecornu1651
    @helenlecornu1651 7 місяців тому +3

    Ryan, as I'm sure many other people have said we have Cyclones (hurricanes), Tornadoes, Floods, Bushfires, Earthquakes, Waterspouts, dust devils and of course massive droughts in Australia - Plus a lot of things that love to bite!

  • @onarollof4
    @onarollof4 7 місяців тому +1

    The bushfires experienced in the 2019-20 season burned 19 million hectares of land in southern Australia, greater than the combined area burned in the Black Saturday 2009 and Ash Wednesday 1983 bushfires.

  • @karenglenn6707
    @karenglenn6707 7 місяців тому +2

    This is a day that just about every Victorian who was alive at the time will never forget. The thick smoke all over the state, into the cbd. The fear and terror that we all felt will never leave us. The bravery and sacrifice of so many volunteers who we respect and give thanks to every single day for their bravery and complete and utter dedication to their fellow Aussies. They are never and will never be forgotten. So many terrible stories that will stay with us always. And peace and love to the families who lost their loved ones, I cannot begin to imagine your suffering.

  • @adriaandeleeuw8339
    @adriaandeleeuw8339 7 місяців тому

    I remember this clearly, first the dust storm I was driving a truck with eight tons of cement bags on the back, I was travelling from a place called Lilydale to Croydon a short distance, out of Lilydale was a steep climb and as I crested the hill I glanced to the West and saw the huge dust storm in the distance, as I descended the hill on the other side I was buffeted by the winds noting the dust was still way off in the distance, the wind was so strong it literally pushed my truck out of its lane onto the side of the road, I continued on and entered a less windy patch of the highway and this continued until I reached my workplace.... I pulled my truck into the yard and drove it straight into the shed, wound up the windows of the truck, ran inside the building and started to shut the doors. The boss asked me what I was doing, I told him, about the dust storm coming. The amount of dust over everything was phenomenal.

  • @tiaelina1090
    @tiaelina1090 7 місяців тому +1

    We lived in Adelaide during that time and it was frightening, you could see the smoke and the darkness, eerie red colour in the sky surrounding the Adelaide Hills. After the fires were out we took a ride into the hills to look at the devastation. It was horrific and so sad.

  • @AndyViant
    @AndyViant 7 місяців тому

    I was at school during the dust storm and remember it well.
    Some of my school friends were involved in the ASH WEDNESDAY bushfire, losing friends, family and animals at Beaconsfield, Cockatoo and Gembrook.

  • @shanebarker3131
    @shanebarker3131 7 місяців тому +1

    It did happen on Ash wednesday. I can remember being 7 yrs old and sitting in school, i lived in Adelaide and we had a howling hot northerly all day.

  • @bigoz1977
    @bigoz1977 7 місяців тому +31

    Mate, during the 2019/2020 fires over 1 billion animals were thought to of died. I’m guessing this video was released before then. The 09 fires happen just after I left Australia and moved to the UK. That was scary as I had friends and family very close to that one. The 2020 ones I was back here for and that was very close to me, well some parts were as the fires spread around massive areas of the country. Also being called Ash Wednesday has nothing to do with religion. Just as you said so much ash.

    • @dee-smart
      @dee-smart 7 місяців тому +3

      I heard 2 billion actually in the worst bushfires we had in 2019/2020. It was a HAARP activated bushfire - in other words using energy weapons. Used in the Californian bushfires that happened around the same time too.

    • @The_Calm_Chaos
      @The_Calm_Chaos 7 місяців тому +9

      Sadly it was actually close to 3 billion animals, including around 64,000 koalas.

    • @The_Calm_Chaos
      @The_Calm_Chaos 7 місяців тому

      Oh god, please don't bring that conspiracy sh1t in here on such an important topic. @@dee-smart

    • @k.vn.k
      @k.vn.k 7 місяців тому +4

      @@The_Calm_Chaosmore like 10 billion animals including unhatched eggs, all insects and reptiles

    • @lynnmoses3563
      @lynnmoses3563 7 місяців тому +9

      The Ash Wednesday fires were actually on Ash Wednesday in that year, 1983

  • @compphysgeek
    @compphysgeek 7 місяців тому +1

    I didn't live in Australia in 1983 and just came to Australia in 2009, but if you're looking up that 2009 fire, also look up the 2019/2020 fire. I don't know how the last one compares to the other ones regarding casualties, but its extent was almost the entire east coast of Australia in Victoria and New South Wales.

    • @carlynsonny4ever
      @carlynsonny4ever 7 місяців тому +1

      That was Black Saturday, over 100 lives were lost.

  • @50NewEyes
    @50NewEyes 7 місяців тому +2

    I lived through it I was 7 at the time, we lived on top a mountain range with a massive horse shoe valleys on either side and we were surrounded by it, we saw it all burn but some how luckily it never hit our house, the old boys fire protection system paid off, sprinklers everywhere even covering the roof…. It was crazy… will never forget how black e every thing was, as far as you could see was just burnt it a crisp…..

  • @tomthumb4142
    @tomthumb4142 2 місяці тому

    My wife and I owned a block of land at Cockatoo in the Dandenong ranges, luckily we had not built on it but it was in the fires and got burnt, at the back of our land was a house which somehow did not get burnt because the firefighters were dowsing it with water, we had trees at the back of our land which were only burnt on our side and not burnt at all on the other side...In Victoria we are so thankful for our CFA (Country Fire Association) who volunteer their time and put their lives on the line for all of us especially as they are not paid...God bless them and keep them safe.

  • @narellesmith7932
    @narellesmith7932 7 місяців тому +1

    Just before Ash Wednesday a huge wave of dust came from Country Vic over melbourne like a tidal wave and blotted out the sun for hours . It was 40 degrees and I had a temperature the same so was sent home from work. Couldn’t breath outside and needed a scarf over mouth nose and eyes to run inside.

  • @tyeadel
    @tyeadel 7 місяців тому +2

    There have been many large bush fires. Around about 1953 my dad drove us along a coastal road with a view toward the Adelaide Hills. They were ablaze for miles and miles; you never forget a sight like that. Over here on Kangaroo Island we had a blaze about three years ago that burnt about 60% of the island (its about 100 miles long). We were evacuated twice.

  • @bethanyblack8545
    @bethanyblack8545 7 місяців тому +1

    I grew up in the Adelaide hills and was in year 4 when this happened. We were sitting on the school oval, with the sprinklers going watching the fires burning on the hills around us. We were lucky that the wind changed direction or we would not have made it. By that point there was no way in and no way out. Several of my friends lost their homes, the wildlife and livestock were all burned where they stood and everything was black for months. We moved to the foothills after that and bush fires both scare and fascinate me.

  • @jadendrysdale8864
    @jadendrysdale8864 7 місяців тому +8

    During Ash Wednesday there was a fire that almost destroyed our home town and my mother had to evacuate from school.

  • @theimperfectscrapper5313
    @theimperfectscrapper5313 7 місяців тому +1

    At the time, I lived only 40km south of the Macedon Ranges. Was swimming in a friends pool and ash was literally falling out of the sky and into the pool with us.
    These days I now live in that area - and I’m worried about the heat this summer.

  • @kimvenning2801
    @kimvenning2801 7 місяців тому

    Hi Ryan, There were also the 2019/2020 fires that went through Qld, NSW, Vic, SA etc. All these big bushfires can make their own weather systems; fire tornadoes included. Pyrocumulonimbus clouds with dry lighting can feed and spread the fire. Volunteer fire service names vary from state to state. Country Fire Service (CFS) and Rural Fire Service (RFS) as well as CFA.
    We also get other isolated tornadoes from time to time, usually fairly small and localised... but sometimes larger and more destructive. Also we do have the odd earthquake.
    Ash Wednesday is also an important day for Anglicans. The fires occurred on the same day as Ash Wednesday in 1983.

  • @emceen8566
    @emceen8566 7 місяців тому

    There's a particularly chilling series of radio broadcasts from Ash Wednesday by an Adelaide radio reporter named Murray Nicoll; he recounts live on radio as he and others around him hide from the fires, and then reports from the street as his own house burns down in front of him.

  • @SameJoinTheClub
    @SameJoinTheClub 7 місяців тому +2

    Ash Wednesday spread across two states. I was 2yrs old and the fire was approaching our house in the Adelaide Hills. It didn't reach us thankfully.

  • @OutbackLife656
    @OutbackLife656 7 місяців тому

    Ryan FYI we are in the bushfire season..27th October 2023. I am in outback Queensland . We received a notice this morning to prepare to evacuate. The smoke was very thick this morning . Water bomber brought in as firefighters battle four major blazes around were I am ... two areas near me have had to evacuate.. We are ready to go if needed . - Dozens of fires are still active across Queensland as the state is hit by some of the worst blazes in 40 years. We all love our volunteer firefighters out here...

  • @louise8001
    @louise8001 7 місяців тому

    I remember these fires. It happened just before we moved to Adelaide from Sydney. We were visiting my dad's sister, and we could see the flames in the Adelaide Hills from West Beach Caravan park where we were staying. It was a scary sight when you are 8 years old.

  • @laughingjackaso8163
    @laughingjackaso8163 5 місяців тому

    started on a wednesday. i was 13 at the time and my dad was fighting it as a member of the Selby CFA (Country Fire Authority - a volunteer based system). was very scary at the time as most of the surrounding hills/bush around Melbourne was burning, and visibility was almost nothing due to smoke haze over the city and suburbs.

  • @PeterKelley
    @PeterKelley 7 місяців тому +2

    Also check out the 1967 Hobart fires, my parents survived those

  • @jenniferslack-smith5129
    @jenniferslack-smith5129 7 місяців тому

    Brave men. They are volunteers and have been fighting bushfires for years.

  • @OriginalLittleDragon
    @OriginalLittleDragon 7 місяців тому +1

    To answer your random thought question, YES, Australia can get tornadoes, but there has never been a recorded EF5, though two that we had could technically be classed as it, especially one that happened in the 1970s

  • @user-hf3vy3hu7i
    @user-hf3vy3hu7i 7 місяців тому

    I was on a fire truck just near Lorne. We had no choice but to drive to the beach and watch our truck burn in the car park as we sat on the beach.
    The heat/fire was so intense the bitumen on the road was on fire behind us as we raced to the ocean out of the nearby hills.
    Black Saturday was even worse but to my good fortune our fire truck was despatched to the Buffalo Valley ( NE Victoria) to stop fires from
    exiting and heading towards nearby towns... thankfully it never did.
    Ryan, please note.... rapid (strong) wind changes are a nightmare for firefighters .... a fire heading south in a narrow front ( due to wind from the north)
    suddenly swaps to a broad front as the wind swings west/east. A 1 mile front can become a 30 mile front in minutes. Thankfully our firefighters
    now have excellent links with the Weather Bx. and we now get advanced warnings of any approaching shift .... this was not the case 15-20 years ago.

  • @tfrowlett8752
    @tfrowlett8752 7 місяців тому

    Black Saturday was the deadliest with 173 killed and 414 injured. Some victims weren’t even burnt, they just suffocated as the fire used up all the oxygen in the area. That was also the hottest day in Australian history at 48.8°C or 119.84°f.

  • @missqiqilamour
    @missqiqilamour 7 місяців тому +1

    We lost our back fence to the Ash Wednesday fires. I'm now a dispatcher for the fire brigade and worked through Black Saturday. The reason our fire trucks are now equipped with fire suppression systems to protect our fire fighters who experience flash overs is because of the lives lost during Ash Wednesday. Love to all our Emergency Services colleagues ❤

  • @graftedingrace6594
    @graftedingrace6594 7 місяців тому

    My mum was 8 months pregnant with me during the Ash Wednesday fires and she said the ash was falling on our verandah near inner Melbourne. I'd say the name has a double meaning.
    The 2019/2020 bushfires were horrific too. Many terrible bushfires in Australia.
    R.I.P to the many who lost their lives.

  • @charlotteharvey3442
    @charlotteharvey3442 7 місяців тому +3

    our firefighters are true heros and most are volunteers', they are saving us in fires and their own homes have burnt to the ground, they are more than heroes, words cannot express our respect for these wonderful men and woman and our ses volunteers'

  • @lucindasavona2278
    @lucindasavona2278 7 місяців тому

    I've been through 3 bushfires now.
    They were nothing like those one.
    They were a lot "tamer."
    They're was still ash & burning leaves raining down.
    I manned a garden hose in each of those situations.
    The volunteer fire fighters managed to stop the fire from reaching me each time.

  • @glennboyd939
    @glennboyd939 7 місяців тому +1

    Australian bushfires can travel at almost wind speed. You cannot outrun them on foot. The biggest danger is red hot embers landing upto 40km downwind, creating many new fire fronts.

  • @user-nw4vv8sg8z
    @user-nw4vv8sg8z 7 місяців тому

    I was only 4yrs old an it was like a huge ring of fire tall as anything an the people all come together as one huge community to get through it. God bless all who fight these fires then an now

  • @SalisburyKarateClub
    @SalisburyKarateClub 7 місяців тому

    I remember that, so hot that week, temperatures in the 40's Adelaide was virtually surrounded we had rellies trying to contact us as they weren't sure if we were ok. My dad's place was in the direct line of a fire that was coming down a creek, just up the road from him, fortunately it didn't continue. Down south around Mt Gambier I was going through a pine forest (for paper production) and some of the trees looked like they'd melted and bent over. A lot of the trees were still usable but too many to utilise, so they dropped them in Lake Alexandrina and removed them as needed. Not sure if they've recovered all of them, but the destruction was unbelievable. RIP to all those who lost their lives, not all super heroes wear capes.

  • @belindahutchinson5333
    @belindahutchinson5333 7 місяців тому

    Ash Wednesday...I remember that! I was a child at the time. The fire was on its way to our suburb in the foothills of Adelaide. Thank you to all the firefighters that fought for our safety! It was called Ash Wednesday because of the fire 🔥

  • @carolclancy6943
    @carolclancy6943 3 місяці тому

    My Husband, now 60 was involved in a burn-over up at Mount Macedon during Ash Wednesday. He & his Team were in a CFA Truck and got caught. Not something that a Fire- fighter ever forgets.

  • @joycie014
    @joycie014 7 місяців тому

    My sister and her family lost their home at Mt. Macedon in those fires. One of the worst days of my family’s lives. Yes, it happened on Ash Wednesday. A fire-fighter friend told me that the fire travelled underground via the root systems of the trees. And spot fires, once ignited, quickly turned into deadly blazes that devastated anything in their paths.
    I remember the dust storm before the fire on Ash Wednesday and it was so frightening and eerie. It was extremely hot weather and the atmosphere was claustrophobic and hard to breathe and see. It came across Melbourne around 3-4pm. Sadly, there had been another fire in Macedon the week before and property and livestock had been destroyed. I had attended a concert on the Sunday before Ash Wednesday with my sister and her husband, to raise funds for their neighbours who had been affected. Then three short days later, they were all in a far worse position than the first lot of people, except for the ones who had managed to come away with a fairly small amount of damage, then to lose everything. 😢

  • @nightberg1971
    @nightberg1971 7 місяців тому

    @Ryan Was: I was living in Victoria in the Upper Yarra Valley when Ash Wednesday happened. Attended a good friend's b'day party (we all were around 12 / 13 years old) and basically watched it start at the bottom of our section of the valley, up one side, out to the major water catchment area (which used to be called the Upper Yarra Dam - can't recall what it was changed to - been away from Victoria too long), then the wind changed direction, and it started heading back towards the town I lived in, but on the other side of the valley (the side where I lived). By around 2 pm it looked like it was around 8 pm at night - almost as if it was evening turning night. Thick black smoke, strong winds (which was responsible for spot fires starting up to 1-2 km ahead of the fire-front), and the air tasted horrible. Could feel the ash on your teeth and tongue whenever you breathed in. Weather changed again and we got some rain which helped the fire fighters immensely. Over a few days we were all on edge, waiting for the evacuation order, but thankfully never had to. A few days on, and we heard Cockatoo (someone else has mentioned it in the comments) and a few close-by small towns got completely razed to the ground. Some loss of life, but could have been so much worse.
    I remember the first night - Mum let me climb onto the roof of the house - sat by the chimney stack and watched the fire burning on the other side of the valley. Still to this day, it looked like lava slowly making it's way down the mountainside towards town. I also remember when the bulk of the danger had passed by, one morning I went outside and looked at all the ash on the lawn. I grabbed a zip-lock sandwich bag, filled it completely, and had barely cleared a square metre of lawn. And not just thin, powdery ash - thick chunks of burned bark from the trees - completely burned - removed from the trees by the high winds, in thick pieces - about 3/4 to an inch thick. Never gonna forget that.
    About 10 years later, moved to Sydney, and as you have previously watched Ryan, 2019 was an absolute nightmare for Australia - the smoke from the fires drifted across to New Zealand and stained the glaciers rusty pink. All the memories of Ash Wednesday came flooding back - and the taste of ash in the air breathed reminded me of that time too. As for Ash Wednesday, I forget the final number of lives lost, I just remember it was bad .... real bad.

  • @jesslee5904
    @jesslee5904 7 місяців тому

    I was in those fires as 10 year old. Still remember every moment of that day. It was on Ash Wednesday the smoke was so thick I couldn’t see my own hands. We got out and had ash dumped all over us by the wind.

  • @jayjayjase9796
    @jayjayjase9796 7 місяців тому

    Will never forget watching the news as a kid in Adelaide and seeing a reporter standing in front of his house while it burned to the ground.

  • @terryjackson8773
    @terryjackson8773 7 місяців тому +1

    I was pregnant with my second child and lived in Adelaide in South Australia. I remember watching the fires from near where we lived as it raced through the Adelaide Hills, razing everything in its path. It was frightening to watch.

  • @Iittleblackchook
    @Iittleblackchook 7 місяців тому +2

    Fingers crossed for Summer this year xx