Results 1 to 15 of 25
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1st January 2020, 08:53 AM #1SENIOR MEMBER
- Join Date
- Jun 2009
- Location
- Elizabeth Bay / Oberon NSW
- Age
- 76
- Posts
- 133
Bushfires - Spare a thought for the victims
Yesterday we learned that SWMBO's family farmhouse near Bodalla was lost in the fires. It dates from 1860. Fortunately her sister was staying with us in Sydney having prepared the house against fire and leaving house sitters on site. It's almost on the river flats of the Tuross and the paddocks were mostly green, few trees around the house and no long grass. The sheds, horses and stock survived.
This morning we put her on the plane to Moruya in the hopes they could land in the smoke. I suppose you have to experience it before you realise that everything has been lost. We loaded her up with heavy shoes, asthma medication for the smoke, cash and myriad other things she might need.
In Moruya, Narooma and Bodalla, there's no power and no mobile phones working. The supermarkets are closed - no refrigeration and no credit card facilities. Thousands of people have been evacuated and pretty soon will need extra supplies just to survive.
If you're like me, you have to be part of it to begin to understand the depth of the crisis facing all areas where homes and businesses have been destroyed or under threat. The power of these fires has to be seen to be believed.
Somehow the crackers on Sydney Harbour last night didn't feel right.
mick
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1st January 2020, 09:43 AM #2
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1st January 2020, 09:47 AM #3
The government is MIA - too busy watching their pretty fireworks in Sydney.
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1st January 2020, 10:24 AM #4GOLD MEMBER
- Join Date
- Apr 2018
- Location
- Nsw
- Age
- 64
- Posts
- 558
I have mixed feelings on it all, where do you draw the line as to what is appropriate? Should there be no celebration for NYE because of the fire tragedy? I guess people respond differently to situations
We spent NYE at a friends with another couple who lost both of their homes and their whole property burnt out earlier that day and they were just happy that their family was safe and said insurance will sort the rest out. They were disappointed the local fireworks were not on.
Other people would respond differently which is fine and appropriate too.
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1st January 2020, 10:45 AM #5SENIOR MEMBER
- Join Date
- May 2014
- Location
- Canberra
- Posts
- 36
We have no idea whether our daughter's house at Lilli Pilli is still standing. Fires Near Me up is not up-to-date as we have seen footage/tweets of many houses burnt in nearby hamlets but those areas are not even greyed out on the map. Now no power, no petrol, no phone coverage. The whole thing is sickening. At least we know she is safe and in Canberra nearby. I didn't want to watch any fireworks last night.
And the conditions are going to be worse again on the weekend
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1st January 2020, 11:26 AM #6SENIOR MEMBER
- Join Date
- Jun 2009
- Location
- Elizabeth Bay / Oberon NSW
- Age
- 76
- Posts
- 133
I think the RFS Fire Control people are overwhelmed. Thank goodness for the yanks and Canadians and others who've flown in to help. The logistics of controlling so many units and people across 100 fire grounds, all of which can change in an instant, are mind boggling.
A mate who lives on Smiths Lake near Forster called this morning to tell me that yesterday they had 2 fires start nearby. Within a short time they water bombed the bejaysus out of the fires before they got out of control. This is clever management IMO.
Everyone wants more off season back burning but there's so much country and so little safe weather that I can't see it making much difference. Property owners complain bitterly and with good reason when burns go awry and the organisers cop the blame. The ground water hasn't been fully replenished from the Millennium drought.
The scientists predicted all this years ago and we didn't listen. This is looking like the new normal.
mick
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1st January 2020, 11:37 AM #7SENIOR MEMBER
- Join Date
- May 2014
- Location
- Canberra
- Posts
- 36
Totally agree! My comment was no criticism of the efforts that are underway. I heard a policeman say this morning on ABC South East Radio that there was a lot of devastation from Broulee up through Malua Bay and into Lilli Pilli but they have no idea how bad. They are trying to get into the area today but there are trees down on the roads.
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1st January 2020, 12:50 PM #8
ABC Radio are doing a fantastic job of keeping everyone informed, and the RFS are working wonders in very difficult conditions.....huge thanks to everyone involved.
While listening to the ABC this morning, the thought occurred that the two organisations doing the most to help under the current circumstances have both been subject to funding cutbacks by the bunch of clowns supposedly running the country.....
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1st January 2020, 01:13 PM #9SENIOR MEMBER
- Join Date
- Jun 2009
- Location
- Elizabeth Bay / Oberon NSW
- Age
- 76
- Posts
- 133
After all, we have a new footy stadium to build in Sydney and a budget surplus to achieve in Canberra.
The federal Minister for Emergency Services, David Elliott, left for a European holiday AFTER Scomo was shamed into returning from Hawaii. He's now decided to return. You've gotta wonder...
mick
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1st January 2020, 05:30 PM #10
Earlier in the fire season when there were fires south of Jervis Bay and roads were cut, the people of Tathra (I presume fishermen, but don't know for sure) took beautiful seafood meals to the firefighters there by boat. It was gratefully appreciated. Now they and towns in that area are in trouble. I hope they are out of trouble soon.
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1st January 2020, 06:16 PM #11rrich Guest
We have been having a series of very severe fire seasons. (Fire season such a stupid term.) Typically the season starts late summer through autumn. This year we lost a town of 26K or so. I think that there were 85 deaths.
To put things into perspective, there was an interview with someone that refused to evacuate due to the approaching fire. You and I sitting here are thinking "That is expletive stupid." But then the elderly gentleman said, "At my age what difference does it make? It is all that I have and I couldn't start over." I never saw another interview nor any indication that he saved his house.
My heart goes out to those who have lost anything in the fires. There are two bits of advice that I can give:
1 ~ The insurance company is not now nor ever will be your friend. They are an adversary and a rather nasty one.
2 ~ Do not accept an insurance company's offer of money for damages. Make the insurance company get a contractor to effect repairs. That way you'll have two parties to hold responsible and a lot less headaches.
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2nd January 2020, 09:06 AM #12SENIOR MEMBER
- Join Date
- Jun 2009
- Location
- Elizabeth Bay / Oberon NSW
- Age
- 76
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- 133
I can't agree with point 2, Rich. Maybe it works in your parts but I wouldn't do it here. I want a builder of my choice and personal recommendation who has so much private work, he wouldn't need to take jobs from insurance companies. I did it once only, after a burglar had kicked a door in. I waited weeks before he turned up, did a very ordinary job and probably charged the insurance company an arm and a leg. I'll go with a bloke who will not only do good work but who relies on me to get paid.
mick
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2nd January 2020, 05:45 PM #13rrich Guest
Mick,
You have a very valid point. It has been my experience that the insurance company only offers about half of what it would cost to effect repairs.
Here in Huntington Beach I know and trust about 4 contractors. One that I know is a general and he would go fight with the insurance company for the job for me because we are previous customers.
Here with vehicles, we get to choose the repair shop, per California state law. I've come to realize that all the shops bid very high for the job. Then the insurance company beats the repair shop down in price before authorizing the repair.
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2nd January 2020, 05:51 PM #14
Glider
Sorry to hear of your personal involvement in a fire catastrophe. I totally agree that until you have experienced the event it is almost inconceivable. We think of fire as an abstract: Not as a physical angry phenomena. It is difficult to conceive the conditions: The unrelentless heat with the flames fanned by wind, the restricted vision because of smoke (and difficulty breathing), the inability to communicate because the towers and lines have been burnt away and the abject fear of where the fire is actually going to come from.
Then after all this you may still be cut off without water, without food and without contact. Simply frightening.
The Sydney fireworks, I have to assume, were already bought and paid for and unlikely to cause a fire in the centre of Sydney, but I still view it's continuance as insensitive. I would like to think that many times the expenditure of the Sydney fireworks will be spent on "relief" on what is rapidly becoming the nightmare of the century so far. The extent of the fires, the early onset of the fires and the scarcity of water which which to fight the fires are all severe in the extreme. It is apparent Australia does not have the capacity to deal with fires on this scale. As the fire chiefs warned of this months back, the responsibility has to rest with the government on this one. I heard today on the radio that the young liberals have voiced their discontent on the matter. Somebody among the old liberals had better be listening and be prepared to act: With all speed.
I talked with a Forum member today who had only just escaped from the fires in southern NSW. As the roads were closed he was trapped for three days and spent last night sleeping in his vehicle as that was the only place he could go.
My sympathies to anybody caught up in these disasters.
Regards
PaulBushmiller;
"Power tends to corrupt. Absolute power corrupts, absolutely!"
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2nd January 2020, 06:59 PM #15Senior Member
- Join Date
- Jun 2017
- Location
- Moorooka
- Posts
- 42
In no way am I trying to suggest I understand what those affected by the fire are experiencing
I thought I should add my experience in case it help someone who may not feel in control of what is occurring.
We have a heritage home and as such pay extra for insurance for this home. We also own a few rental properties with standard policies.
We had an extreme hail storm that seriously damaged every property a few years ago, one house is in a trust and went though without any serious involvement from myself. The others are all insurance with one company, I managed all the repairs these properties using the insurance builders, yes they tried to cut corners but I told them they were to do the job properly using the same standard of materials originally used. I was told the insurance company would not approve of my requests, they wanted to use cheaper materials. I rang the insurance company and was told they must replace like with like.
In the end the first insurance builders were sacked and a replacement was supplied. The replacement builder had to redo most of the work the first company carried out. I would personally use the builder the insurance company recommends and check the work as they have to make it right. This is what you are paying for after all, btw the must warrant the work.
Of course a fire is a lot worse than any storm and I genuinely feel for those affected, but if anyone here is affected remember you insurance company is not doing you a flavour any more than you paying the premium is doing them a favour.
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