Thu 24 Oct, 2013 3:23 pm
Mon 28 Oct, 2013 8:15 pm
perfectlydark wrote:With respect happy pirate I dont think we can really compare bushwalkers taking small amounts of wood nearby for small fires to british peasants that would have been taking much larger quantities for day to day life.
Mon 28 Oct, 2013 9:22 pm
Travis22 wrote:Interesting website Icefest. Thanks for the link however i didnt find that article interesting or informative at all on the matter.
I did like some of the other articles there tho.
I guess re: the fuel reduction burns article i think its pretty vague, too vague. Im more interested then ever these days and constantly find myself in the middle between all bush user groups. Its very frustrating.
All that article needed was some bs comment about alpine grazing to top it off. (For the record im 110% against alpine grazing).
Travis.
Mon 28 Oct, 2013 9:35 pm
Mon 28 Oct, 2013 10:40 pm
DaveNoble wrote:A question regarding the recent Winmalee bushfires.
The first Winmalee fire was in September (see http://www.news.com.au/national/breakin ... 6718141345) and I understand that this was caused by a control burn and then some unexpected weather. According to the article 1000 hectares was burnt out.
Now the question I want to ask, and someone may be able to answer. Was this area re-burnt in the more recent fire? Did this big burnt out area change the new fire in any way? e.g. slow the fire down or prevent damage to houses nearby?
Dave
Mon 28 Oct, 2013 10:57 pm
Happy Pirate wrote:Does that not answer your question?![]()
Steve
Mon 28 Oct, 2013 11:17 pm
DaveNoble wrote:Happy Pirate wrote:Does that not answer your question?![]()
Steve
Thanks, but not really.
I am fairly naive on these matters, but one would think that if an area had a control burn, and the fact that the control burn turned into a bushfire and burnt out a lot more than was intended - and then there was another bushfire in the same place a month later - then one could perhaps conclude that the first control burn didn't actually do that much to prevent or limit the second fire. Now - as I said - this is my naive view based on almost no factual information about where the two fires actually went and where the houses were burnt down. Perhaps someone with good local knowledge can shed a little more light on this matter?
Dave
Wed 30 Oct, 2013 11:41 am
Wed 30 Oct, 2013 12:13 pm
Wed 30 Oct, 2013 9:50 pm
maddog wrote:An article in the Conversation blames climate changes, rather than aboriginal burning, for a loss of megafauna. It is claimed that burning had a negligible impact on fire sensitive vegetation on which the megafauna depended. It is suggested that the colonists may have been highly skilled in using fire to manage landscapes.
http://theconversation.com/did-fire-kil ... auna-19679
Thu 31 Oct, 2013 9:07 pm
Happy Pirate wrote:I haven't read this one yet but these articles appear every so often claiming to have 'proven' one side of the argument or the other. There are articles on TC that make the opposite claim to this one.
Actually this one doesn't 'blame' anything for MF extinction...I do find that a fair number of the articles denying aboriginal influence in megafauna extinction, vegetation change...
Fri 01 Nov, 2013 9:33 am
Fri 01 Nov, 2013 2:26 pm
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