Ruminations

Blog dedicated primarily to randomly selected news items; comments reflecting personal perceptions

Wednesday, January 09, 2013

Terrified family clings dock for hours as wildfire rip through town and destroys their home

Associated Press and National Post Staff | Jan 9, 2013 11:35 AM ET | Last Updated: Jan 9, 2013 11:53 AM ET
Tim Holmes, Holmes Family / Associated Press
Tim Holmes, Holmes Family / Associated Press Tammy Holmes, second from left, and her grandchildren take refuge under a jetty as a wildfire rages nearby in the Tasmanian town of Dunalley on Jan. 4.
 
DUNALLEY, Tas. – As a wildfire destroyed their Tasmanian home, Tim and Tammy Holmes gathered their five grandchildren and headed for the only place they thought would be safe: the area beneath a wooden jetty, where the frightened family stayed for over two hours.

The family clung to the jetty and to each other as the fire tore through the town of Dunalley, about 56 km east of the state capital of Hobart, Australia, until they found a small boat and made their way out of the fire zone.

The Holms Family, Tim Holmes / The Associated Press
The Holms Family, Tim Holmes / The Associated Press   The Walker siblings – six-year-old Caleb (left)
 four-year-old Esther (second from left), nine-year-old Liam, and eleven-year-old Matilda (right,
 holding two-year-old Charlotte), prepare to enter the water to take refuge with their grandparents 
under a jetty as a wildfire rages nearby Dunalley. 
 
“The difficulty was there was so much smoke and embers and there was probably 200 millimetres to 300 millimetres of air above the water,” Tim Holmes told Australian Broadcasting Corp. television on Monday.

“So we were all just heads; water up to our chins just trying to breathe because it was just – the atmosphere was so incredibly toxic,” Holmes said.

The grandchildren ranged in age from two to 11 and were staying with the Holmes while their mother Bonnie Walker attended a funeral, according to the Daily Mail.

Walker feared her family had been killed, the newspaper reported.

Tim Holmes, Holmes Family / Associated Press
Tim Holmes, Holmes Family / Associated Press    A building burns near a jetty where Tim and Tammy 
Holmes attempt to shelter their five grandchildren as a wildfire rages nearby on Jan. 4. 
 
“We just waited by the phone and receive a message at 3:30 p.m. to say that mum and dad had evacuated, that they were surrounded by fire, and could we pray,” Walker said in an interview with Australia’s ABC network.

“So I braced myself to lose my children and my parents.”

Record temperatures across southern Australia cooled Wednesday, reducing the danger from scores of raging wildfires but likely bringing only a brief reprieve from the summer’s extreme heat and fire risk.

Australia had its hottest day on record Monday with a nationwide average of 40.33 degrees Celsius, narrowly breaking a 1972 record of 40.17 C. Tuesday was the third hottest day at 40.11 C. Four of Australia’s hottest 10 days on record have been in 2013.

“There’s little doubt that this is a very, very extreme heat wave event,” said David Jones, manager of climate monitoring and prediction at the Bureau of Meteorology.

Tim Holmes, Holmes Family / Associated Press
Tim Holmes, Holmes Family / Associated PressTammy Holmes and her grandchildren take refuge 
under a jetty.
The locations of wildfires in Australia are indicated here.

“If you look at its extent, its duration, its intensity, it is arguably the most significant in Australia’s history,” he added.

Cooler conditions brought relief to firefighters, who were battling around 200 fires across Australia’s southeast, and gave them the chance to build earth breaks to try to contain the blazes. The risk from fire was expected to increase later in the week as temperatures again rise.

No deaths have been reported from the wildfires, although around 100 people haven’t been accounted for since last week when a blaze destroyed around 90 homes in Dunalley. On Wednesday, police spokeswoman Lisa Stingel said it was likely most of those people simply haven’t checked in with officials.

Survivors have told stories of swirling flames, toxic fumes and desperate escapes.

The fires have been most devastating in Tasmania, where at least 128 homes have been destroyed since Friday and more than 198,000 acres burned. Hundreds of people remain at two evacuation centers in the state’s south.

“People have lost everything. We can’t comprehend that devastation unless we are in their shoes,” Tasmanian Premier Lara Giddings said.

In Victoria state, north of Tasmania, a fire injured six people, destroyed nine homes and caused the evacuation of the farming community of Carngham west of the city of Ballarat, the Country Fire Authority said.

In New South Wales, Australia’s most populous state, firefighters were battling 141 fires, including 31 that had not yet been contained. Fires burning out of control near the towns of Cooma, Yass and Shoalhaven were the most concerning.

Wildfires are common during the Australian summer. Fires in February 2009 killed 173 people and destroyed more than 2,000 homes in Victoria.
People have lost everything. We can’t comprehend that devastation unless we are in their shoes
Jones, the meteorologist, said the current heat wave was a progression from the last four months of 2012, which were the hottest September-December period on record.

With Wednesday’s cool-down in southern Australia, the national capital, Canberra, dropped from a high of 36 C on Tuesday to 28 C and Sydney dropped from 43 C to 23 C.

Jones expected that Wednesday would also rank among Australia’s hottest days when the national temperatures are calculated. That’s because the extreme heat has shifted from the heavier populated south to northern and central Australia.

The bureau forecast above average temperatures for the remainder of the summer, compounding the fire danger created by a lack of rain across central and southern Australia over the past six months.

“It is going to be very challenging,” Jones said of the wildfire danger.

The U.S. government announced on Tuesday that 2012 had been the United States’ hottest year on record.

A brutal combination of a widespread drought linked to a La Nina weather event and a mostly absent winter pushed the average annual U.S. temperature last year up 0.6 C above the previous record set in 1998 to 12.96 C.


The same La Nina brought flooding rains to much of Australia in the cool first half of 2012.
The second half was dry and hot, ending the year with a daily temperature 0.11 C above the daily average of 21.81 C.

With files from Associated Press writer Kristen Gelineau in Sydney.

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