Commenced:
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01/01/2005 |
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Submitted:
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08/04/2011 |
Last updated:
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16/02/2016 |
Location:
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Cherokee, Victoria, AU |
Climate zone:
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Cool Temperate |
(projects i'm involved in)
Project: Fernglade Farm
Posted by Chris McLeod almost 10 years ago
If you ever wanted to know what a volcanic eruption would look like here, you needn’t worry anymore. This week the state government undertook a forest fuel reduction burn-off up in the mountain range itself. The photo below tells the story better than I can:
[Image]
Forest fuel reduction burn-off on Mount Macedon
at the western end of the mountain range
At the farm which is in the middle of the mountain range,
the sky literally turned red due to the smoke.
As a bit of background history about the mountain range: way
back in 1983 on 16th February, the Ash Wednesday bushfires burnt
through this mountain range. On that one day alone over 1 million acres of land
were burnt in every imaginable environment outside of urban areas which includes
forests, coastline and also grasslands. The heat generated by the
fires at some locations was estimated to have exceeded 2,000’C (3,632’F) degrees which exceeded that
recorded during the Allied bombing of Dresden in World War II. In fact, the heat
and energy per metre produced by the Ash Wednesday fires was estimated to be similar
to that of the atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ash_Wednesday_bushfires
Anyway, the fires on that day back in February 1983 worked
their way up into the mountain range by way of the regular NW prevailing winds through
that very patch of forest that was burnt off this week. Some people say that
lightning doesn’t strike in the same place twice, whilst I reckon they’re
talking total rubbish as common sense says that it does.
History has provided a salient lesson and I needed no further
incentive to do the best that I can at the farm here to prepare for the
eventuality of a bushfire at some stage in the future.
I have a list of projects that would be ideal to complete
before the bushfire season is upon me and I’m slowly working through the list.
Seeing the burn-off this week has however provided a sense of urgency that I hadn’t quite
felt before.
The construction of the new steel shed (i.e. steel is
unlikely to burn) is one of those projects on the list and you can see
it progressing
in the background of this photo below which looks across the bee garden.
[Image]
Bee garden with new steel shed under
construction in the background
This week I continued construction on the new shed and installed the
steel roof trusses. Hopefully the shed will be covered by the old
recycled steel sheeting by
next weekend.
The photo below puts the new shed into context as it shows
the new shed under construction relative to the existing cantina shed.
For the rest of the entry + photos click on: http://ferngladefarm.blogspot.com.au/
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