DUB
Da, da da, da dah!
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My location is in my profile. I'm about six miles from where the fire with the koala and the fire fighter started. I live in the edge of a city, about 10 houses from a conservation park which marks the edge of the metropolitan area. So whilst I'm not in as much danger as those living in the country, I'm not as safe as those living closer to the CBD, and I have to be vigilant under certain conditions.Are you out West? Don't know why, but it just seems like you had mentioned that in tha past. I got this picture and post from a guy down in NSW. He was also saying his water tank has never been so low, and there's a couple more months to go. I saw an interactive map, and it looked like the whole darn Continent is on fire....
View attachment 29260
A bushfire & Tornado combined.
Imagine.........
Edit: This is a "small" & isolated fire. There's a likelihood that two bigger fires in NSW are going to suck each-other into one huge conflagration. I don't want to think of the consequences if that were to happen. It's the big ones that are the problem.
And the wind changes....
Yes, basically the whole continent is on fire. Most of those fires are away from populated areas though. The problem is that everything is so dry, the fires just can't be stopped. Embers blow ahead of the fire front, and instantly create new fires that similarly can't be stopped. Some fires are creating their own firenadoes, and other fires are creating their own thunderclouds, that create lightning, that start more fires, and the cycle repeats.
The South Island of New Zealand is covered in smoke from Australia, so much so that the glaciers are turning brown. An estimated half a billion animals have died so far, and some species are feared to have been made extinct. Thousands of homes have burned down. Towns have been evacuated by the Australian Navy because all road access has been cut off by the fires. We don't know how many people have died yet because many people are listed as missing, and no-one can get in to those areas to check on them.
We're not even half way through bushfire season. Looking for a positive, what has been burned can't be burned again.the 2018 California fires burnt 2 million acres; the 2019 Amazon fires 2.2 million; and the 2019 Siberian fires 6.7 million.
So far Australia's 2019/20 fires have burnt 12 million acres.
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