That's over 116* F!

This is INSANE.  I have never felt that sort of heat in my life!  (Yes, I know that's the sort of temp - and hotter - that they get in Central Australia and the Middle East, but this is MELBOURNE!)

Girlfriend, Carmel called in for a visit (we ate our Optifast bars together ;~P) and we noticed the bushfire brown sky just before she left.  Then we stepped outside and saw THIS -



That's not a cloud behind that blanket of brown, it's smoke.  Rolling and roiling as we watched, looking frighteningly like a bloody nuke! From a bushfire maybe 20km away.  *flails*  The wind is HORRIBLE.  :~C  The heat is unbelievable...

Carmel has had to take a different (and longer) route home because of the fire danger between her house and ours.  *flails*


From: [identity profile] sue-parsons.livejournal.com


Been there. Escaped horrific heat/smog/fires in Southern California. Now I am in a place where all of those things are terribly unlikely.

I know your pain. Hug your aircon and ice your birdies. And dream of cooler climes.
ext_40142: (fat adipose cute)

From: [identity profile] leelastarsky.livejournal.com


I'm aware you have a lot of eucalypts in Southern CA... I can't help feeling they're the cause of the terrible bushfires you seem to get there every year now.

I feel incredibly lucky to have seen out today in air-conditioned comfort!

From: [identity profile] sue-parsons.livejournal.com


I was able to move up to Northwest Washington state a few years ago, so I've escaped the annual conflagration. The eucalyptus are only a small part of the problem. Long periods of drought each year keep the plants scrubby, small and dry. Since they are close to the ground and tinder-dry, it takes only a spark from a campfire or lightning strike to set up a blaze. THEN add to that the seasonal Santa Ana winds, with gusts past sixty miles per hour, and you have the perfect storm.

Where I lived, in Chino, it was a large, long bowl-shaped valley surrounded my mountains on the north and east and tall hills to the west and south. Often we would be able to see the flames on the mountains or hills, and the smoke would get so bad my students would not be allowed to have recess outside and would have to pull up their shirts just to go down the outside hallways to get to the bathrooms. Ashfall would cover the cars and sidewalks, cloaking the landscape in gray. When the rain would finally come, residents would have to worry that the hillsides would come slithering down into their houses in the form of mud.

I don't miss a bit of it. Up here is gorgeous, and far too wet most of the time to cause concern about forest fires. The air and water are pure and clean. And people truly care about keeping it all that way.
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