pmccarthy Posted January 9 Author Posted January 9 Wish it was wet now. Choppers and fires around us. Blowing a gale. 1
old man emu Posted January 9 Posted January 9 It's been so dry at my place since April that there is hardly anything in the paddocks to carry a fire. I'm even noticing that trees in the paddocks away from the creeks and gullies are starting to die. 1
facthunter Posted January 9 Posted January 9 Heat, visibility, gusts and lack of Oxygen are a problem for Aircraft. It's easy to overstress the Aircraft and have insufficient LIFT and power. Nev 1
Jerry_Atrick Posted January 9 Posted January 9 1 hour ago, pmccarthy said: Heading our way. Stay safe.. hope it doesn't reach your property 1
facthunter Posted January 9 Posted January 9 Stay SAFE. Easier said than done in this RAW Country. Top half Flooded. The rest burning.. Nev 1
red750 Posted January 9 Posted January 9 Should change the thread name to Crikey it's Hot. Top temp today 42.9°, 44° at Tulla. They had to unload some cargo from some planes, they were too heavy for the heat. 1
facthunter Posted Friday at 08:11 AM Posted Friday at 08:11 AM Density altitude. Worse at Alice Springs where the runway is at 1100 ft asl. Nev 1
pmccarthy Posted Friday at 09:38 AM Author Posted Friday at 09:38 AM Dozens of houses lost in Harcourt and Sutton Grange, including my daughters. We are OK due to a wind change. 5
facthunter Posted Saturday at 06:48 AM Posted Saturday at 06:48 AM VERY SAD to Hear. I know the Area well. Great stress for Many in such times. Keep safe. Nev 2 1
nomadpete Posted Saturday at 11:47 AM Posted Saturday at 11:47 AM (edited) Well I arrived back in Tassie and stepped off the plane into 29 degree heat (yeah I don't expect you lot to call that 'heat'). A total fire ban was imposed all weekend due to heat and expected wind up to 100kph. Tassie being tassie, whilst heatwave and wind stoked the fires ravaging the mainland, we got a cool weekend - dead calm and rain. CRIKEY IT'S WET! Thankfully only one vegetation fire down our way and it started in the middle of the night. Promptly dealt with by a couple of crews. Wilder fires are the new norm. Edited Saturday at 11:49 AM by nomadpete 1 1
facthunter Posted Saturday at 11:37 PM Posted Saturday at 11:37 PM Over 42 degrees in Sydney. Warmer seas Mean More ENERGY. . Lightning starts Fires. Nev 1
Jerry_Atrick Posted 2 hours ago Posted 2 hours ago The Otways have gone from being on fire to intense flooding all within a week: https://www.theage.com.au/national/victoria/car-swept-out-to-sea-in-wye-river-flash-flooding-20260115-p5nucc.html 1
facthunter Posted 2 hours ago Posted 2 hours ago Typical Otway's. The Low Bush that grows there is a real fire Hazard even down to the sand and water. Nev 1
old man emu Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago It's still dry here. The other day I watched cloud move in and for a few minutes copped very strong winds and a downpour. At the end of those few minutes everything calmed down and the sky cleared. 1
facthunter Posted 45 minutes ago Posted 45 minutes ago NOW it's FLOODED Big. What a change in so short a time? Coastal Western Victoria is a bit like that. Rarely Desert Dry. Nev
Jerry_Atrick Posted 8 minutes ago Posted 8 minutes ago True, but I can't ever recall it ever resulting in cars being washed out to sea before..
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