'The Blaze Arrived from All Sides': NSW Town Assesses the Damage After Wildfire Sweeps Through.
As a local resident arrived home on Friday afternoon, his rural mid-north coast property was enveloped in a massive cloud of smoke. Less than twenty-four hours later, a pair of homes on his street were consumed, and the surrounding forest would be reduced to a scorched landscape.
A Community at the Centre of Tragedy
The township of Bulahdelah, around 235km north of Sydney, has found itself at the heart of a tragedy after a experienced firefighter died on Sunday evening when he was hit by a collapsing tree. This marks a “foreboding start” to the bushfire season.
A total of four homes have been lost in the wider Bulahdelah area, comprising two on Emu Creek Road, where Morgan lives, one on the Pacific Highway and one south of the township.
“No words can express it,” Morgan stated. “The dogs didn’t leave my side, the fear was palpable.”
Landscapes of Loss and Fortitude
Bulahdelah is a popular stopover on the Pacific Highway for tourists on their way up the mid-north coast to beach areas such as Seal Rocks, Forster and Port Macquarie.
On Monday afternoon, the highway south of town was shrouded in dense, ochre-hazed smoke. Aircraft conducting water drops hovered overhead, assisting firefighters on the ground who were working to contain a fire that had scorched 4,000 hectares since Friday.
Passing trucks slowed to observe road markers and warning signs, the scorched trees and charred grass on each side of the highway proof of how far the fire had swept through the adjacent Myall Lakes national park. It was still at a watch and act level on Monday evening.
The Nerve Centre for Firefighting
In Bulahdelah, though, it would seem like another ordinary day if not for the helicopters circling overhead and scent of burning hanging in the atmosphere.
A refuelling station for aircraft has been established at the town’s showground, turning it into a hub for around 300 fire crews and volunteers who have travelled from across the state to help.
On Monday afternoon, cartons of water were being offloaded from trucks and sweets were being packed into zip lock bags. One firefighter noted that they needed a bottle of water every 20 minutes when on the fire line.
First-Hand Stories from the Blaze
Billows of smoke were still rising from smoldering patches on Emu Creek Road, a meandering country road that follows a creek bed south of the township where two houses were lost.
On a fence post outside a burnt property, a charred teddy bear remained attached to the log, still wearing a Christmas hat.
Down the road, Morgan was on his veranda with his two dogs, a little patch of grass surrounding his house the sole remnant of how the landscape used to look. Miraculously, his property was spared, despite his neighbour’s burning to the ground.
He remembered receiving a call from a friend at lunchtime on Saturday, telling him “you’ve got about half an hour and then a fire’s going to hit”. His timing was precise.
“We hosed down the property and shed down, sprayed the fence line,” he said, and then his reaction turned to “alarm”. “I thought, ‘this is overwhelming’,” he said. “But I wasn’t leaving.”
Fortunately, crews protected the home, and succeeded in defending it. The bushfire moved through in about half an hour, with a sound resembling “a roaring inferno”.
An Environment Altered
Morgan, who has resided at the same house for around 30 years, has not witnessed the land in such a dry state.
“It once rained rain every week,” he said. “This intensity is new. But you’ve got to take the good with the bad.”
On the same street, Jeff Curley was looking after his friend’s property which had also mostly been spared Saturday’s blaze, other than a broken headlight on a car and a container of wood stored for winter that had been reduced to ashes.
“I am very familiar with this area,” he said. “Previously a fire almost approached a nearby ridge and that was pretty scary then, but the wind changed.
“It’s just so much drier this time. It came from everywhere, and the firefighters essentially protected it [the property].”
This experience wasn’t new for Curley, who nearly lost his home in Wattle Grove when fires swept through in 2019.
“You see people on the news say, ‘The speed was unbelievable’,” he said. “You think it’s over there, and all of a sudden it’s on top of you. I understand the feeling. I told my friend to evacuate immediately, and he did.”
Fire Service Update and Continuing Danger
Kirsty Channon, spokesperson for the NSW Rural Fire Service, said crews from multiple agencies had come from “right up and down the coast” to assist in the containment effort and had done an “outstanding job” protecting houses from being destroyed.
She said all agencies had “pulled together” after the tragic loss of one of their own.
“The firefighting community is a close-knit group,” she said. “The threat persists.
“There have been instances of the Pacific Highway open and close a few times, the fire jump backwards and forwards. It’s still not contained, it is expected to spread.”
Channon said work in the immediate future would center on the small community of Nerong, which was anticipated to be impacted by the Pacific Highway blaze on Monday evening. Authorities advised locals to evacuate if unprepared, and prepare a bushfire survival plan.
“Little fires are igniting from storm activity a few days ago,” she said.
“Tomorrow’s weather is mid 30s with variable wind, and that has been difficult - wind changes direction in the area.”