When the Fires Come (full video)

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  • Опубликовано: 27 дек 2024

Комментарии •

  • @kristy4134
    @kristy4134 5 дней назад +1

    Stumbled across this. Really informative clip. I like that it has stay and go arguments. The fact that people survived under such a horrific fire storm, means it’s possible.
    It also shows why you should go if you are not prepared.
    Thank you

  • @wiretamer5710
    @wiretamer5710 Год назад +11

    PUBLIC SERVICE ANNOUNCEMENT:
    'Once in a hundred year event' does NOT mean it will only occur about once every hundred years. It means that EVERY YEAR the odds of it occurring are 100 to 1 against... which is not nearly as unlikely as once a century implies.
    Pass this knowledge on, every time you hear someone make this mistake.

  • @gingergamer3270
    @gingergamer3270 2 года назад +15

    The problem with Black Saturday is that the wind broke windows and took tiles off roofs because it was so strong (estimated at 110 ks/h) so a lot of people who sheltered in their house, which had been safe on other fire occasions, were killed when the fire burned the house down around them. Most people who fled at the last second (which is a terrible thing to do but they weren't getting updates on the position of the fire until it was too late) ending up surviving. This seemed to break patterns of the past and I know this was a very different event, but it is discouraging to hear advice telling you to shelter in your house when you know 176 people died doing that, or leave as early as you can if not earlier, when you aren't being updated on the fire until it's at your door

    • @FerretKibble
      @FerretKibble Год назад +3

      Makes me think of building fires, where advice is to get out... unless the building is a tower, where the advice is to stay on floors not in fire so you're not putting yourself at risk, holding up fire fighters trying to use the stairs... and then Grenfell happened.

    • @12345fowler
      @12345fowler Год назад +2

      Not all 173 people died inside their house our inside buildings

  • @kym9258
    @kym9258 2 года назад +17

    Never stay just leave, save your family, save your pets, save your sanity. No human can fight nature. Survivor of Black Saturday bush fire.

    • @gingergamer3270
      @gingergamer3270 2 года назад +2

      I'm glad you're okay, if you don't mind me asking/if you ever read this, what town were you in?

    • @kym9258
      @kym9258 2 года назад +4

      @@gingergamer3270 Marysville

  • @PurdyBear1
    @PurdyBear1 10 лет назад +22

    This is an absolutely fascinating documentary. I'm from the UK so everything is new to me. It does make you look at your home differently - do I have trees too close to the house etc. I'm glad to hear our English Trees work well for fire breaks. As I'm a visual learner I will remember everything I have learn from the programme, thanks for that.

  • @watchthe1369
    @watchthe1369 Год назад +2

    It is the embers that kill. It takes several minutes for a fire to ignite regular wood siding, so the house (and Barn) can tolerate the passage of the fire front IF you keep everything flammable at lest 12 meters out. Once the fire front passes over kill any ember piles you find against the buildings and work your way outward. It helps to have sprinklers out in the yard well ahead of any expected fire arrival to get everything well soaked to suppress spotting.

    • @watchthe1369
      @watchthe1369 Год назад +1

      I would think about sheet metal storm shutter covering to protect any large glass exposures too.

  • @jsrobinson132
    @jsrobinson132 11 лет назад +4

    Such a tragic event - praying that this devastation will never happen again. So very proud of my son-in-law. They moved to Melbourne only 18 months ago and he's now an active member of the Country Fire Authority in Mernda, Victoria.

    • @Jack-oz4bf
      @Jack-oz4bf 6 лет назад +2

      it will happen again its only a matter of time unfortunately, mother nature is ruthless.

  • @bennuballbags2
    @bennuballbags2 8 лет назад +10

    The part about the wallaby in the house makes me miss home and absolutely proud to be Australian...this whole documentary is excellent.

  • @mickreynolds4831
    @mickreynolds4831 11 лет назад +4

    Please where can I buy a copy of this amazing video. You have captured the emotions and how to prepare, act and survive so well. But please where can we buy this from.

  • @wasslic
    @wasslic 4 года назад +4

    Understand the point of the video, but seriously staying to defend property against a bush fire is sheer stupidity. No property is EVER worth the same value of a human life. Would have thought the explosive apocalypse of Black Saturday, would have driven that point home.

    • @punkybrewstar83
      @punkybrewstar83 4 года назад +5

      I'm honestly thinking, that moving forward, everyone in a rural or semi- rural area needs to prepare to be blocked in and forced to stay. There is barely any notice at times, or the fires are burning for weeks then all of a sudden travel at top speed. I don't think that relying on the idea that you will have time to flee is solid either now. I know that a lot of places have ovals or a water body, but I think that a certified personal fire shelter is definitely worth it, and it will last for many decades, waiting until you need it . And fortifying your home against fire is definitely worth it, which has nothing to do with staying or going.

  • @biancapierce639
    @biancapierce639 8 лет назад +9

    I want to know if the cows in the dam survived?

  • @corunnastationhuntervalley2577
    @corunnastationhuntervalley2577 5 лет назад +2

    thank you CFA i have been looking for exactly this information:)

  • @nicolascarnot4857
    @nicolascarnot4857 7 лет назад +4

    Just watching this again as we face what looks like could be a difficult fire season. It's only september and the KBDI is already over 100 in my area.

    • @fukkyoutube
      @fukkyoutube 4 года назад

      it happened 2 years ago and again this year i cant believe there is anything left to burn

  • @man9170
    @man9170 8 лет назад +4

    8:33 12:03

  • @chiccabay
    @chiccabay 9 лет назад +2

    I am just wondering ,whether it would be an idea to have cellars underneath the houses (as they do in many European countries)or shelters, similar,but more reinforced, as have for tornado´s in the US.This was a heartbreaking event.

    • @renlish
      @renlish 9 лет назад +10

      +Chicca bay Unfortunately cellars would be death traps in the case of big fires like this. Fire uses oxygen - unless you have oxygen supplies to hand, you may be protected from the fire but you also run the risk of cooking in the sheer heat and suffocation from lack of air.

    • @chiccabay
      @chiccabay 9 лет назад

      +Renlish Thank you.Happy Christmas to you and your team.

  • @cfavic
    @cfavic  11 лет назад +3

    Hi Mick. Send us your contact details at cfaconnect@cfa.vic.gov.au

  • @sonnyjimm23
    @sonnyjimm23 Год назад +1

    The copa - our plan worked.
    What plan mate, luck? If your property was never going to survive then why even be there. Typical copa even a failure is written as a win.

  • @Laggravate
    @Laggravate 10 лет назад +2

    Shame lol

  • @baconinasoupcanshrekinasou5194
    @baconinasoupcanshrekinasou5194 10 лет назад +1

    trollololol