Nerriga Firestorm

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  • Опубликовано: 14 ноя 2022
  • On 21 December 2019 a firestorm hit the small town of Nerriga. This documentary combines footage from the firefighters on the ground that day with interviews of the firefighters themselves.
    #bushfires #wildfire #fire #firefighter #documentary #australia #canberra #rfs

Комментарии • 45

  • @ClickyMister
    @ClickyMister Месяц назад +1

    as a firefighter myself this is hands down the best and least sensationalist reportage of what it was like during this time. Well done.

  • @ronvolmershausen9225
    @ronvolmershausen9225 Год назад +20

    This footage has compelled me to leave, after 10 years of being on RUclips, a comment. The documentary conveys the personal journeys for both the producer and the participants...and it's been done in a most respectful and inciteful way. Thank you for uploading and sharing freely a very important addition to the historical record.

    • @themartincgreenwood
      @themartincgreenwood  Год назад +7

      Thank you. That’s a very lovely comment. Martin

    • @loraineriddell7157
      @loraineriddell7157 7 месяцев назад +2

      Well said Ron 👏

    • @amygone2pot
      @amygone2pot 2 месяца назад

      No tribute, no words could ever repay the work these RFS volunteers do for their communities. They literally put their lives on the line.

  • @stevewhitehouse4051
    @stevewhitehouse4051 2 месяца назад +3

    Wow great video, thanks. As a QFES Rural volunteer I spent a great deal of time down in NSW and ACT during this time with my colleagues.

  • @MichelleLincoln
    @MichelleLincoln Год назад +14

    Thanks for telling this story Martin

  • @HGCUPCAKES
    @HGCUPCAKES 6 месяцев назад +3

    Well done. This was brilliantly out together. The contents was raw, honest and powerful. Made me feel like I was there with them. Well done.

  • @mattchagnon5620
    @mattchagnon5620 3 месяца назад +1

    I'm hooked on these Australian wildfire videos.

  • @matthewtalbott6146
    @matthewtalbott6146 Год назад +6

    great video thanks for sharing i was braidwood staging manager and came out the next morning with the COW and freezers for the pub

  • @pauln8503
    @pauln8503 Год назад +5

    Great documentary about exceptional people in extraordinary times.

  • @loraineriddell7157
    @loraineriddell7157 7 месяцев назад +1

    Goosebumps and tears 😥. My daughter, as I write this, is undergoing the level 1 training. Last weekend there was a big training/competition in Tasmania and she said that the simulated scenario when the fire goes over the truck (I can't remember the term for it) brought the severity of firefighting into focus for her. She said that as she was hunkered down behind the front seat, it was the first time she felt a little fear. She went on to say that one of the questions asked was whether she would call her family or the overhead firefighting plane/chopper. She apologized to me and said that she would call the overhead firefighters and I told her that she had made the right decision. I wouldn't want to hear what was going on in the heat of the moment.
    This video brought it all home to me - the bravery of firefighters is beyond words.

    • @AustinsMadness
      @AustinsMadness 6 месяцев назад +1

      The burnover training (which I am pretty sure is what you are talking about) Does really bring into your mind that you are going to do something dangerous, I remember my first drill and I only realised then just what I was getting myself into. Thankfully I have never had to use that training and neither has anyone else that I know

  • @kirstyfreeman2230
    @kirstyfreeman2230 Год назад +7

    Thank you for sharing. I take my hat off to all of the RFS, for protecting people and infrastructure at a risk to your own safety - Thank you. I live in the bush and know all too well how terrifying and destructive these fires can be. Take care out there.

  • @maggieshanahan6140
    @maggieshanahan6140 Год назад +6

    Thanks so much for sharing this story. I hope all of you are ok, it’s clear how much you all support and care for each other, and how that support and care is what makes the difference.

  • @AlexRea-tj4od
    @AlexRea-tj4od Год назад +5

    Thank you to the crews that came to help

  • @tomsummer5336
    @tomsummer5336 Месяц назад

    Fantastic video and you are all very brave ❤

  • @geraldinegaynor1360
    @geraldinegaynor1360 Год назад +3

    I am reading a book called Currowan. by Bronwyn Adcock and have just read the chapter about the Nerriga fire. It was a great book and this chapter was very dramatic. I’m glad you showed us the Pub.

    • @themartincgreenwood
      @themartincgreenwood  Год назад

      Thanks Geraldine. Agree it’s a great book. Glad I was able to show some of the reality for the people on the ground.

  • @jonathanclarke5878
    @jonathanclarke5878 Год назад +3

    Great work Martin and to all who were there

  • @davemcp
    @davemcp Год назад +3

    A really well put together story. Thank you for sharing this.

  • @geoffreycrisp5268
    @geoffreycrisp5268 Год назад +3

    Great video Martin and what impressive, inspirational people

  • @chrismontgomery3155
    @chrismontgomery3155 Год назад +5

    That is one day I will never forget, In my time of being a rural fire firefighter, I have never seen or experienced anything like what happened on that day

  • @brushrescue1701
    @brushrescue1701 9 месяцев назад +2

    Excellent well done ✅

  • @marcjenkins1520
    @marcjenkins1520 4 месяца назад +1

    Amazing people.

  • @Bonez0r
    @Bonez0r Год назад +5

    This makes me want to be a firefighter.

    • @loraineriddell7157
      @loraineriddell7157 7 месяцев назад

      Do it! My daughter has just joined and she said that it's one of the most rewarding experiences of her life. We desperately need passionate people in the service.

  • @Aquarium-Downunder
    @Aquarium-Downunder 8 месяцев назад +2

    I know the road well, I drive from Nowra to the ACT 3 times a week, I stop at the Nerriga Pub for a feed and cold drink. Some times I stop outside lae at night for a sleep under the Pubs lights.

  • @jodiecascio2253
    @jodiecascio2253 Год назад +5

    If it wasn't for you guys and the mosquito squads and the helicopter my place would have burnt in Tomboye on 4/1/22. Very scary times. Hope that you never have to deal with that again. Very interesting story Martin

  • @williamstearns7490
    @williamstearns7490 8 месяцев назад +2

    As a former USFS firefighter, I have to ask, if anyone cares to share, why do Australians seemingly rely on “pump and roll” with brush trucks as the primary wildland firefighting method?
    For the kind of dense, greasy, almost explosive fuels and high fast moving flame fronts, it seems like it’s a hell of an ask for engine crews.
    Though ballsy and dedicated to the fight they obviously are, the threat of entrapment, if not burnover, seems to be there pretty often.
    But maybe it’s just the videos I’ve been watching…

    • @duaneturner4552
      @duaneturner4552 8 месяцев назад +3

      You are 100% correct that the fires are certainly explosive and we mostly do direct attack our bushfires with bushfirefighting appliances. We are sometimes able to use some aviation support but that is limited. We don’t have a lot of choice because the areas are vast with not many resources to share across a very large area. It is worth noting though that we prefer to ‘rely’ on the use of firebreaks and off-season backburning and direct attack is certainly not preferred. It is our emergency response for people and property protection.

    • @williamstearns7490
      @williamstearns7490 8 месяцев назад +1

      @@duaneturner4552 thank you for the reply! Yeah, I bet appliance resources are pretty thin considering the area. We have the same issue; rarely enough engines to chase the spot fires, wet lines along roads, and protect structures. And almost never enough aircraft to provide drops, when they are available at all for your fire.
      Though here we mostly rely on hand crews and dozers to remove the fuels on the flanks and front to contain, direct, or at least slow a wildland fire.
      Do you have many dozer or hand crews, because I’ve only seen engine and air attack so far during my limited exploration of firefighting in Australia.
      Though considering the heat, evil fuels, and hateful winds you have, the thought of having bunker gear and an SCBA handy (and air conditioning) on an engine between me and the heat, smoke, and fire sounds much nicer than just my Nomex, Pulaski, and fire shelter! 😂
      And now that I think of it, I’m curious about water access for those engines. Do most places out there have municipal water to connect and refill, or is do you folks have to have a constant shuttle of tankers bringing it in?
      Thank you again for taking the time. But also feel free to ignore me because I don’t want to monopolize your day with my dumb questions. Cheers!

    • @loraineriddell7157
      @loraineriddell7157 7 месяцев назад +2

      I don't know what's happening on the mainland of Australia, but apparently Tasmania is getting a number of additional aircraft starting this 2023/24 fire season 🤞. Perhaps the government of the day is finally waking up to how the climate has changed and the severity of fires now because of the dryness?

  • @nathanpuckeridge9110
    @nathanpuckeridge9110 Год назад +4

    Hero's

  • @jammyscouser2583
    @jammyscouser2583 6 месяцев назад

    The sky went orange all over nz

  • @zacallan6594
    @zacallan6594 8 месяцев назад +1

    Did the cows die?

    • @loraineriddell7157
      @loraineriddell7157 7 месяцев назад

      Zac, unfortunately there are always stock losses in big fires like this one 😥. It's awful to see the aftermath and a lot of stock have to be euthanized once the damage is assessed after the fire has gone through.

  • @aaronpaulking3675
    @aaronpaulking3675 4 месяца назад

    Meanwhile I’m being fined for clearing scrub close to my house near an ultra flammable tea tree valley!? I’m not that far from Neriga ..