Like Stan,
I was fortunate to be able to spend some time over the Christmas break in the
African bush, and, like him, I found it helped me put things in perspective and
even unblocked a badly blocked chapter.
After that I traveled to Australia for a trip to Tasmania guided by two
great friends who were born there and shared my enthusiasm for food and wine
and birds. Tasmania was separated from
the mainland ten thousand years ago and developed some unique bird and animal
life, including the Tasmanian Devil and the so called Tasmanian Tiger. The Devil is endangered as a result of
infectious facial tumors that first appeared in the nineties and have
devastated the wild population. The
Tiger was hunted to extinction with the last individual dying in captivity in
the 1936. The human history is sad also, with the aboriginal people suffering the same fate as the Tigers and the early European
settlements being the cruel Van Diemen’s land penal colonies. But it is a wonderful island with gorgeous
vistas and friendly people. Last year Tasmania had a
good winter followed by a hot, dry summer.
And that
was the problem.
The day
before we arrived, Friday January 4th, the temperatures soared
across all of southern Australia as hot winds circulated over the central
interior. Hobart (the largest city in
Tasmania) hit an all-time high recorded temperature of 105 degrees. And high winds gusted through the country
areas where dry grass and dead wood waited for any spark.
That day
fires raged through the Tasman peninsular in the South, around Freycinet on the
East coast, and also in the North. With
the fire fighters stretched thin, and no hope of reinforcements of equipment
and men from the mainland, the fire services battled to exhaustion. More than a hundred homes were lost to the
flames with damage estimated at over $50 million, but miraculously no one died.
Veterans of the previous Tasmanian fires agreed that a remarkable job
had been done with the resources available.
Now the high temperatures and fires have spread to Victoria and New
South Wales, where one fire front stretches around fifty miles. Shockingly, many of the fires are set by arsonists.
We were not
in any of the immediately affected areas but we heard stories from people who
had been evacuated and didn’t know whether they had still had homes. As we drove up the coast, my South African
cell phone beeped and announced: “EMERGENCY WARNING – Residents of Kellevie and
Bream Creek are to evacuate NOW to the Marion Beach.” It may seem as though having a nearby beach
at least will save your life, but it’s not that easy. You have to get far enough from the flames to
avoid the heat, poisonous gasses, and smoke.
One family clung to a pier with just their heads above the water until
the flames had passed.
Did we have
a good trip? It was excellent. The locals called for visitors not to cancel
their travel plans. Tasmainia needs the tourists; my friend colorfully describes the Tasmanian economy as "cactus". But there is a feeling of
guilt when one is having a good time and other people nearby are escaping with
only their lives.
Michael –
Thursdays
PS
Congratulations to the OTHER Michael Sears whose excellent debut novel BLACK
FRIDAYS has just been short listed for an Edgar award. (Nothing to do with bush fires, by
the way!)
It's very difficult for an American of a certain age to hear "Tasmanian Devil" and not think of Bugs Bunny and Daffy Duck. But this is not a cartoon, for as you point out, these are real fires threatening real lives.
ReplyDeleteI have to wonder if these extreme temperatures in that part of the world are the new normal. I hope I manage to make it there while there are still Tasmanian devils!
ReplyDelete