The story of the worst of the Black Saturday bushfires that raged through Victoria in February 2009. Kinglake is a town about 50km north-east of Melbourne. It was virtually destroyed by the fires and many residents died. #HeatofJuly #Burn
The story of the worst of the Black Saturday bushfires that raged through Victoria in February 2009. Kinglake is a town about 50km north-east of Melbourne. It was virtually destroyed by the fires and many residents died. #HeatofJuly #Burn
173 lives lost, 2000 homes burnt to the ground, 1000s of hectares of forest and farmland incinerated and millions of animals dead. This was the physical toll the 2009 black Saturday fires took on the Kinglake area. The mental, emotional and economic toll would play out for years to come. This book explores all of this in the most gripping and compelling and personal way. It has invaded my thoughts and taken over my dreams. A must read.
Picked this up on the recommendation of @TheDoubleLetterThief It's the story of the horrific black Saturday bushfires in Kinglake (just north of Melbourne) in 2009. I remember this day vividly. The book combines personal experiences with the science of bushfires. So far it's really good - as much as a book about deadly and massively destructive fire can be anyway.
In Feb 2009 the small town of Kinglake, just north east of Melbourne, was engulfed by a megafire. Conditions were extreme and resulted in a fire front that lasted an hour, melted roads and killed over 170 people. This is an absolutely gripping account of that day. It even goes into the science of the weather of bushfires and some of the history of how societies view fire. I cannot recommend it enough.
#SeptemBowie #day10 #AshesToAshes This book is about the black Saturday bushfires that occurred in the Victorian mountain ranges on 7th February 2009. That summer was one of record high temps and the resultant firestorms were some of the worst ever in recorded history in Australia. But our bush bounces back very quickly, as do our people and there's very few reminders left of the intensity of the flames, except for the memorials to the lost.