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Serious AMDK Cuntry OZzie Burning Everywhere ... Sinkie Quitters Not Scared???

Pinkieslut

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Mallacoota fire: images of 'mayhem' and 'armageddon' as bushfires rage | Bushfires | The Guardian

Mallacoota bushfire: thousands evacuate to sea as Victorian town burns – video report
Bushfires

Mallacoota fire: images of ‘mayhem’ and ‘armageddon’ as bushfires rage

Helen Davidson

Thousands of people fled to the lake and ocean in Mallacoota, as bushfires hit the Gippsland town on Tuesday.
The out-of-control fire reached the town in the morning and about 4,000 people fled to the coastline, with Country Fire Authority members working to protect them. The town had not been told to evacuate on Sunday when the rest of East Gippsland was, and authorities decided it was too dangerous to move them on Monday.
People reported hearing gas bottles explode as the fire front reached the town, and the sound of sirens telling people to get in the water.
By 1.30pm the fire had reached the water’s edge. A local man, Graham, told ABC Gippsland he could see fire in the centre of the town, and 20m high flames on the outskirts where he believed homes were alight.
“We saw a big burst of very big flames in Shady Gully,” he said.
“As I speak to you I’m looking across Coull’s Inlet and there are big flames … and they would be impacting houses. That’s not good at all.”
People in Mallacoota posted in community social media groups estimates of about 20 houses lost, with the school, bowling club and golf club also hit. Guardian Australia has not been able to confirm these reports.
Hundreds more evacuees sheltered in the community centre.
“There are a lot of people at the waterfront jetty, in the lake, on the sand spit between the lake and the ocean, and there are people on a sandbar, and some on boats,” Charles Livingstone told Guardian Australia from the community centre.
He said there were at least 350 people in the community centre, many with children and pets. He, his wife and their 18-month-old baby were at the jetty on Monday night but moved to the community centre to avoid the heavy smoke.
“The CFA advised yesterday they would protect the waterfront jetty and the hard stands that go along the lower lake here, just in front of where we are. They were saying we’ll protect you down there if the worst comes to worst,” he said.
“I’m sure the CFA will do what they said, but the relief centre to us seemed like to best option. They’re pretty busy and we haven’t had an update in a while.”

10:30am update from Dad at the wharf in Mallacoota - “fire front not far away” #Mallacoota #bushfirecrisispic.twitter.com/MvgeiZqujM
— bluesfestblues (@bluesfestblues) December 30, 2019

Livingstone said he was barely thinking about their holiday house to the south of town.
“We’ll be happy to get out of here ourselves,” he said.
“It’s mayhem out there, it’s armageddon … The other issue is how the hell we’re all going to get out of here – there’s one road in and one road out.”
The fire, which hit the town on Tuesday, started on Sunday in Wingan.
Livingstone said there had been “confusion”, with roads closing and reopening, and so he and his family had not left.
The Victorian premier, Daniel Andrews, said the decision had been made on Monday afternoon that the safest option for people in Mallacoota was to stay there.
“At the community level and regional level [authorities] had to work through what their options were and undertake a risk assessment of that,” Andrews said.
“We decided it would be unsafe to move them back along the Princes Highway.”
Livingstone said the temperature dropped from above 40C to about 20C later in the morning, and people in the water were getting cold.

Community radio in #Mallacoota: "The power is cut. We are isolated. It's a holocaust, basically. Some have been sent to the hall, some to the lake, others have to stay in their homes. There's a lot of thunder. The fires are creating their own weather."
— Alt-Rupert (@TheMurdochTimes) December 30, 2019

While speaking to Guardian Australia Livingstone said he heard an extraordinarily loud boom outside – Mallacoota does not have gas lines and many people have gas bottles that are likely exploding in the heat.
Matt Manning heard it too. He spoke to Guardian Australia from his boat in the lake at the back of Goodwin Sands, about 3km from the centre of town.
“It was a big explosion but we don’t know what it was,” he said.
“Up until an hour or so ago it was pitch black, you couldn’t see 10 feet in front of you. It was just insane. [Now] it looks like it’s 8.30 in the evening.”
Manning, who has been coming to Mallacoota for 20 years, said there were about 30 boats out where he was, most of them locals.
He and his wife, their two friends, and his dog had been camping at the foreshore camp park. He packed up the boat on Monday morning, and late last night they all moved to the waterfront to sit out the fire. At about 3am they decided to get in the boat.
“We’re pretty safe here, hopefully we don’t get any hot embers,” he said.
There’s a lot of debris and ash but so far there’s no hot embers. Winds are about 30-40 knots coming from the south.”

Francesca Winterson is in a building on the main street of #Mallacoota and describes the wind, darkness and falling embers as fires burn about 500 metres away.

She says it's too late to leave and fire crews are on hand to offer as much protection as they can. pic.twitter.com/6Tjfb4nyUR
— News Breakfast (@BreakfastNews) December 30, 2019

“We are completely isolated,” community radio broadcaster Francesca Winterson told ABC Breakfast on Tuesday morning.
“We’ve been broadcasting for 48 hours without a break and we’re all very tired,” she said. “Now we are here in the station and I’m just watching my town burn.”

This picture just in from family boarding boat in #Mallacoota#MallacootaFires approx time of photo 9:45am pic.twitter.com/WJEQScDp9f
— Bradley Deacon (@BradleyWDeacon) December 30, 2019

The township was under one of eight emergency warnings in the East Gippsland area. More than 200,000 hectares have burned, including about 80,000 just in the last 24 hours. Four people were unaccounted for in Victoria on Tuesday morning, and three more in NSW.
Fire authorities said there have been “significant losses” of property, but it was too early to confirm numbers.
 

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Australia fires: Thousands flee to the sea as fires race to coast - BBC News
Mallacoota resident David Jeffrey says people were "terrified for their lives"
Thousands of people in Australia have fled to the seafront to seek shelter from bushfires racing to the coast.
One blaze moved into the Victorian coastal town of Mallacoota, throwing embers towards homes.
Locals described a "terrifying experience" of camping on wharves and boarding boats under blood-red skies.
Meanwhile, officials confirmed another two people had died in blazes in New South Wales. There are now 12 deaths linked to the nation's bushfire crisis.
Several holiday spots along the coast between Sydney and Melbourne are currently cut off by fire fronts.
More than a dozen "emergency-level" blazes span a 500km (310 miles) stretch across two Australian states - from Batemans Bay in New South Wales (NSW) to Bairnsdale in Victoria.
PETER HOSKIN
People in Mallacoota evacuated to the beaches under a deep-red sky

Locals were left sheltering on the beach at Mallacoota on Tuesday morning
The bodies of two men - believed to be a father and son - were found in the town of Corbargo in NSW. A massive blaze had ripped through the town's main street on Tuesday.
"Very tragic set of circumstances," said NSW police deputy commissioner Gary Worboys. "[They were] obviously trying to do their best with the fire as it came through in the early hours of the morning."
Authorities said there were five more people missing in the region - four in Victoria and another man in NSW.
Victoria's state premier Daniel Andrews said navy ships may be called upon to provide food, water and power to the cut-off townships. The main road in the region - the Princes Highway - has been closed off.
"Some of these isolated communities can be accessed by sea," he said.
Presentational grey line

Presentational grey line

Authorities had urged people in the region - many of them tourists - to stay put because by Monday it was too late and dangerous to evacuate.
The bushfires north of these communities had escalated due to a surge in temperatures, winds, and dry lightning.
'We were ready to jump into the water'
Residents in the NSW holiday towns of Bermagui and Batemans Bay also fled on Tuesday morning to the waterfront or makeshift evacuation sites near the shore.
ALASTAIR PRIOR
Locals evacuated to the beach at Bateman's Bay in New South Wales

Residents of Batemans Bay in NSW also headed to the water for safety
Locals told the BBC they had "bunkered in" as the front approached, raining ash on the beaches.
"It was bloody scary. The sky went red, and ash was flying everywhere," said Zoe Simmons in Batemans Bay.
In Mallacoota, one of the worst-affected spots on Tuesday, residents fled to the beach or took up shelter in fortified homes when they heard the warning siren go off at 08:00 local time.
ABC NEWS
A primary-school aged Australian boy wears a mask and life vest in a in a boat on Mallacoota lake after his family fled into the water to escape the bushfire threatening the town on 31 December 2019

One woman shared this picture of her young son wearing a mask and life jacket as the family fled onto a boat to escape the blaze at Mallacoota
"It should have been daylight but it was black like midnight and we could hear the fire roaring," said David Jeffrey, a local business owner. "We were all terrified for our lives."
"There's a rock wall that they've built to keep back the sea, and that was where we were going to jump into the water if the radiant heat had hit," he added.
The fire swept through the town destroying numerous buildings, but was kept back from the shore by a change in wind, locals said.

Firefighters had gathered at the shore as a last line of defence.
As the crisis unfolded, Victoria's state emergency commissioner Andrew Crisp told reporters there were "4,000 people on the beach".
The state's fire service co-ordinator Steve Warrington said: "It is pitch-black, it is quite scary... the community right now is under threat but we will hold our line and they will be saved and protected."
He said there had been "significant property losses" across the entire East Gippsland region in the past days.
Searing mid-40Cs heat combined with strong winds and lightning triggered more than 200 new fires across the state in the past 24 hours.
They have fuelled the rapid expansion of existing fronts, with several blazes so large they are generating their own thunderstorms and lightning.
It is another escalation in the nation's bushfire crisis which has seen hundreds of massive blazes destroy millions of hectares in the eastern states since September.
In total, 12 people have died, among them civilians and three volunteer firefighters.
Firefighter death
A "freakish weather event" killed a volunteer firefighter on Sunday, according to the NSW Rural Fire Service (RFS).
Powerful winds near the NSW-Victoria border lifted his 10-tonne truck off the ground and flipped it over, the service said.
Samuel McPaul, 28, was a newlywed who was expecting his first child. Two other firefighters were also injured and suffered burns.

"To lose one of our own in such extraordinary circumstances is just tragic," said RFS Commissioner Shane Fitzsimmons of the latest death.
Earlier in December, two volunteer firefighters died when a tree fell on their truck as they headed to a blaze near Sydney.
Temperatures exceeded 40C (104F) in every state and territory at the start of the week , with strong winds and lightning strikes bolstering the flames.
Meteorologists say a climate system in the Indian Ocean, known as the dipole, is the main driver behind the extreme heat in Australia.
 

tanwahtiu

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Using population growth to drive the economy failed miserably in past 20 years.

And who did u voted for?
 

krafty

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i am staying in the South East region far away from where it is burning but can smell the smoke.
 

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Rains r here n now these Aussies are afraid of floods.

BOM forecasts massive rainfall for NSW, warns flash flooding possible in state's north
Updated about an hour ago

Sydney storm clouds build over Bondi Beach November 13, 2015
PHOTO: Sydney won't be seeing the much rainfall until the weekend, but can expect over 50mm by Monday. (AAP: Dan Himbrechts )
RELATED STORY: It might finally be time to find that raincoat
Drought and bushfire-ravaged towns in NSW can look forward to a decent downpour later this week, but the heavy rain could bring flash flooding, too.

Key points:
Sydney is expected to be at its wettest this weekend
The highest risk of flash flooding will be in northern NSW
Despite predictions, the rain is unlikely to be enough to break the state's drought
The Bureau of Meteorology (BOM) said a surface trough and high-pressure system would combine to draw tropical conditions down Australia's east coast.

Central and western parts of NSW are expected to get between 15 to 50 millimetres of rain from today to early next week.

In the north-west, around Wilcannia and Cobar, around 50 to 100mm of rain was predicted.

However, coastal areas — particularly in the state's north — could see up to 200mm by Monday.

"We are expecting a low pressure trough to deepen in the north-eastern part of the state," said BOM forecaster Bimal KC.

Map of Australia with blue and green across the north as well as down the east coast, indicating rain
INFOGRAPHIC: The eight day rainfall forecast across Australia. (Supplied: Bureau of Meteorology)
He said this would see "moderate to heavy precipitation" from tomorrow over the Central Coast, which would then make its way south over Sydney.

He said Sydney and the South Coast could also see over 50mm from now until Monday, but would not see significant falls until Saturday.

The BOM said there was also a risk for flash flooding, particularly on the North Coast.

"Flash flooding will become quite a risk, particularly if we get these storms over the same areas day after day," BOM forecaster Dean Narramore said yesterday.

"As we get into the weekend and early next week, we could even possibly see riverine flooding for some parts of NSW as well, and even possibly in the southern parts of Queensland."

How to plan for flooding
Plan for a flood emergency
If you could be cut off by floodwaters, make preparations. ABC Emergency has put together a list of things you should do if you are affected.
The BOM said the rain would also fall over firegrounds and help extinguish some of the bushfires across the state.

However, the RFS has previously said vegetation and trees in fire-affected areas were prone to significant run-off, which could lead to flooding.

The rain is not expected to be enough to break NSW's drought, which continues to affect every part of the state.

Topics: weather, bushfire, nsw,
 

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'A month's worth of rain in a week': Wild weather to drench country
By Matt Dunn - 6 hours ago

Heavy rain is expected to fall in NSW and Queensland in the coming week with a chance of flooding.
Queensland is set to be hit with a month's worth of rain in a week, while widespread storms will drench parts of New South Wales from tomorrow into the weekend.

The Sunshine Coast is preparing for 200mm rain in a single day, with severe thunderstorms set to bring heavy falls in the coming hours.

Flood watch warnings are in place for the coastal catchments south of Maryborough to the NSW border and southern inland catchments.



A marine wind warning is also in place Sunshine Coast, Moreton Bay and Gold Coast Waters.

Gold Coast and Brisbane are also expected to be hit with 100mm and 50mm of rain, respectively.

Severe storms are expected to last until the weekend as a surface trough moving eastward combines with an upper trough over NSW.


There are warnings of flooding. (Supplied)
Sydney will cop a drenching from tomorrow, with widespread heavy rain set for parts of NSW.

Upwards of 60mm of rainfall is expected for both Saturday and Sunday, which could cause potential major flooding.


Coastal parts of the state are being warned of hazardous surf conditions, with NSW police urging people to avoid rock fishing, boating, and swimming on the Hunter Coast, Sydney Coast, Illawarra Coast, Batemans Coast and Eden Coast.

Keeping out of shallow water and ocean bars is also recommended for boats, with those already on the ocean urged to "change or delay their voyage".

The wet weather is tipped to head inland to drought-affected areas as far south as Canberra and to the fire-ravaged areas on the South Coast of NSW and East Gippsland in Victoria.

The bureau has described this as a major weather event, which has the potential to put out some of the 60 fires still burning across the state.


Sydney could experience flooding at the weekend. (Supplied)
ELSEWHERE AROUND THE COUNTRY

Melbourne can expect a sunny day with a top of 22C, while Adelaide will be a sunny 27C.

Darwin will be a warm 32C with a chance of isolated thunderstorms before clearing up tomorrow.

Perth can expect a sunny 34C, while Hobart will be cloudy with a top of 18C
 
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