Well it was a very country farming area, fairly remote
I guess in some senses even after I left school and other people that
you talk to say oh you live out at Dural out in the sticks. It wasn’t
very populated. Most farms were 40 or 50 acres at least.
Len was only 15 when in 1956 he was confronted
with his first serious bushfire.
Well we knew the fire was there, we could see it from
up on top of the hill. We lived up on Old Northern Road at that time on
the top end of the property. On that particular day the phone lines went
down and there was no contact when we were all down at the end of Cranstons
Road all the men of the district were there and all the wives were wondering
what was going on. They had a serious fire heading towards them and no
communication. It was not good and it was about one o’clock when the fire
really got past us and went over the top of us down at Cranston’s property.
It ended up getting across into the Galston area.
My brother and I were bailers on the back of a small international
truck provided by the Captain’s son with 44 gallon drums with the tops
cut out and they were filled with water and we filled the knapsacks with
a bucket from the drums. That fire went for three days so we were kept
very busy.
What sort of equipment did they use to put out
those fires?
It was mainly knapsacks and hessian bags soaked in sump
oil for lighting up for burning back. There was a variety of knapsacks
going from the old ones with the pump handle on the side and then some
that were issued at a later date. I think it must have had a little bit
the wrong angle on the piece of metal that went across your back because
after a few days it would rub the skin off your back and particularly
when your back got wet from the bailers missing the top of the knapsack
a bit and spilling the water down on your clothes. It was incredible what
these men at that time could do and how many times they would pump a knapsack
out in the heat of the day. Really you wouldn’t find anyone today who
would be able to do that.
What was the spirit like among those people who
were all volunteering?
Oh it was a very good community spirit and they worked
all night and all day, they didn’t sleep much. If the job had to be done
they stayed there until it was done and it sort of brought the community
together quite a bit when there were any fires because then the wives
used to get involved with supplying food and drinks and all that type
of thing so it was virtually the whole district involved if there was
a major fire.
Was there a Fire Station at that time?
|
|
Bushfire volunteers carrying out management burn 2006
|
No
there was no station. The first station was actually built in 1961. It
was a while after that that we got a Blitz tanker. It was an ex-army vehicle,
of course, and had been modified with a water tank on it. It did have
a reasonable pump on it but it was not a type of vehicle you could attack
a fire with. It had a top speed of about 35 mph down the hill into Glenorie,
I know, and usually by the time you got to Glenorie it was boiling. It
didn’t like being pushed too hard.
Apart from fighting fires as a volunteer Len,
what other volunteering activities would you have been asked to do?