Donate Now
and become
Forum Supporter.
Many perks! <...more...>
![](http://www.orchidboard.com/community/orchid/closer1.gif)
|
![Old](http://www.orchidboard.com/community/orchid/post_old.gif)
02-08-2009, 11:59 AM
|
Senior Member
|
|
Join Date: Jun 2008
Zone: 4b
Location: Idaho
Posts: 911
|
|
That is just terrible! I know you guys get some nasty fires down there, but this is beyond that. I sure hope they are able to get them under control. Sounds as though the weather is not cooperating though.
Stay safe Roy! How close are the fires to you at this point?
|
![Old](http://www.orchidboard.com/community/orchid/post_old.gif)
02-08-2009, 03:13 PM
|
![nenella's Avatar](http://www.orchidboard.com/community/avatars/nenella?dateline=1284850002) |
Senior Member
|
|
Join Date: Sep 2006
Location: France, Atlantic Coast, Royan
Posts: 3,741
|
|
Oh dear,It's absolutel terrible! they've just shown it on the news here!
My thoughts and prayers go out too all those poor families. I hope Roy is Ok as I believe the worst fires in that part of Australia.
|
![Old](http://www.orchidboard.com/community/orchid/post_old.gif)
02-08-2009, 04:48 PM
|
Senior Member
|
|
Join Date: Sep 2007
Posts: 221
|
|
My sympathy to all our friends in Victoria and Australia for your great loss of life and property, having lived in the Melbourne area and having visited some of the towns lost in the fires and some orchid growers in the areas my thoughts and best wishs go to you all.
|
![Old](http://www.orchidboard.com/community/orchid/post_old.gif)
02-08-2009, 09:01 PM
|
Senior Member
|
|
Join Date: May 2007
Location: Victoria
Posts: 502
|
|
Roy,
I hope the one in the Grampians was of no risk to Halls Gap.
|
![Old](http://www.orchidboard.com/community/orchid/post_old.gif)
02-08-2009, 10:57 PM
|
Senior Member
|
|
Join Date: Jan 2008
Location: Australia
Posts: 1,669
|
|
Quote:
Originally Posted by Andrew
Roy,
I hope the one in the Grampians was of no risk to Halls Gap.
|
Fire is all but out Andrew thanks.
The latest report is....108....dead and Police report that many of these fires were deliberately lit. From the Prime Minister down its being called....Mass Murder. As Andrew has probably hear, there were many victums killed in their cars trying to escape, many crashed in single car crashes and one I saw on TV last nite, 5 cars all together on the road.
The rule is that if you can see smoke leave now, if you can see flames its too late. The people in the cars and their homes were facing flames being pushed by 100kmph winds.
We had that sort of wind here on that day and I'm sure that if a fire had headed towards us, I wouldn't be talking to all here in the forum.
|
![Old](http://www.orchidboard.com/community/orchid/post_old.gif)
02-08-2009, 11:14 PM
|
Senior Member
|
|
Join Date: Jan 2008
Location: Australia
Posts: 1,669
|
|
New report as of this minute....116 dead.
The area burnt by these fires is bigger than the US State of Rhode Island.
|
![Old](http://www.orchidboard.com/community/orchid/post_old.gif)
02-09-2009, 12:56 AM
|
Senior Member
|
|
Join Date: Feb 2008
Zone: 10b
Location: Weston, Florida
Posts: 1,181
|
|
This is very sad news. The people of Australia are in my thoughts and prayers tonight.
|
![Old](http://www.orchidboard.com/community/orchid/post_old.gif)
02-09-2009, 02:09 AM
|
Senior Member
|
|
Join Date: Sep 2007
Posts: 221
|
|
Has anyone heard from Bolero, lives in Bendigo Victoria, the area has had some fires,I hope he is alright.
|
![Old](http://www.orchidboard.com/community/orchid/post_old.gif)
02-09-2009, 03:32 AM
|
Senior Member
|
|
Join Date: Nov 2008
Location: Nonthaburi Thailand
Posts: 465
|
|
This is what i got in todays paper:-
Australian wildfires: 'Hell in all its fury'
By: AFP
Published: 8/02/2009 at 10:11 PM
Kinglake - At least 108 people have been killed and entire towns razed in the worst wildfire disaster in Australian history, described by Prime Minister Kevin Rudd Sunday as "hell in all its fury."
People died in their cars as they attempted to escape the inferno - smouldering wrecks on roads outside this town told a tale of horror - while others were burnt to death in their homes.
The death toll from the wildfires roaring through southeastern Australia has risen to 108, the Australian Associated Press (AAP) reported early Monday, quoting a government official.
While the deadly fires and a heatwave raged in southeast Australia, floods from torrential rains claimed lives in the north, with one victim a five-year-old boy feared snatched by a crocodile as he walked his dog.
The death toll from the fires jumped from 84 to 93 early Monday, the Australian Associated Press said, quoting police.
But there were fears it could rise yet further as medics treated badly burned survivors and emergency crews made it through to more than 700 houses destroyed by the fires, some of which have been blamed on arsonists.
Thousands of survivors jammed community halls, schools and other makeshift accommodation as troops and firefighters battled to control huge blazes fed by tinder-box conditions after a once-in-a-century heatwave.
Twenty-six fires were still burning in Victoria Sunday, with another 53 blazing throughout neighbouring New South Wales.
The devastating fires have affected around 3,000 square kilometres (1,200 square miles) -- an area larger than Luxembourg or nearly three times the size of Hong Kong.
I'm from NZ originally and i know about the Aussie fires that happen...... Here in Thailand, WE often get massive fires as it hasn't rained for over three months
|
![Old](http://www.orchidboard.com/community/orchid/post_old.gif)
02-09-2009, 03:33 AM
|
Senior Member
|
|
Join Date: Nov 2008
Location: Nonthaburi Thailand
Posts: 465
|
|
Heres the rest of it
Hell in all its fury has visited the good people of Victoria in the last 24 hours. Many good people lie dead, many injured," Rudd told reporters, deploying army units to help 3,000 firefighters battling the flames.
The number of dead rose steadily throughout Sunday as rescue crews reached townships that bore the brunt of the most intense firestorm northwest of Melbourne, which survivors likened to a nuclear bomb.
The previous highest death toll in Australian wildfires was 75 people killed in Victoria and neighbouring South Australia in 1983 on what became known as Ash Wednesday.
The latest fires in Australia's southeast flared on Saturday, fanned by high winds after a heatwave sent temperatures soaring to 46 C (115 F), and continued to burn out of control Sunday.
They wiped out the pretty resort village of Marysville and largely destroyed the town of Kinglake, north of Melbourne, with houses, shops, petrol stations and schools razed to the ground.
Marie Jones said she was staying at a friend's house in Kinglake, where at least 18 people perished, when a badly burnt man arrived with his infant daughter saying his wife and other child had been killed.
"He was so badly burnt," she told the Melbourne Age's website.
"He had skin hanging off him everywhere and his little girl was burnt, but not as badly as her dad, and he just came down and he said 'Look, I've lost my wife, I've lost my other kid, I just need you to save (my daughter)'."
An AFP photographer who made it into Kinglake described a road strewn with wrecked cars telling of desperate, failed attempts to escape.
The cars appeared to have crashed into each other or into trees as towering flames put an end to their desperate flight from the town.
Some did not even make it onto the road, said Victoria Harvey, a resident waiting at a roadblock to be allowed to return to the site of her destroyed home.
She told reporters of a local businessman who lost two of his children as the family tried to flee.
"He apparently went to put his kids in the car, put them in, turned around to go grab something from the house, then his car was on fire with his kids in it and they burnt," she said.
In Kinglake, scores of homes were levelled along with shops and the school. The smouldering ruins of the town were deserted except for police and forensic experts.
Police Deputy Commissioner Kieran Walshe said there was no doubt that arsonists were behind some of the fires.
"Some of these fires have started in localities that could only be by hand, it could not be natural causes," he said.
Police have warned that arsonists could face murder charges.
The government's Australian Institute of Criminology released a report last week which said half the nation's 20,000 to 30,000 bushfires each year are deliberate.
Meanwhile in Queensland in the northeast of the country, where some towns have been inundated for a week by cyclonic rains, two people were missing after their car was swept away -- and a crocodile is believed to have taken a boy.
"The boy was walking with his seven-year-old brother earlier this morning when he followed his dog into floodwaters," police said in a statement.
"He disappeared in the water and his brother saw a large crocodile in the vicinity of his disappearance."
Much of the state has been declared a disaster zone, with an area of more than a million square kilometres (386,100 square miles) and 3,000 homes affected by floods.
|
Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)
|
|
Posting Rules
|
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts
HTML code is Off
|
|
|
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 06:52 AM.
|