Please supply your % reference. They seem incorrect. Using that rationale most outback farmers and outback town folk are hell bent on torching their own property. A lot of fire are caused by lightening strikes, and many are never recorded. So supply reference to back up your statement.
https://www.smh.com.au/national/arso...17-p53bcl.html
Sorry, I missed the 1 from the 13% that are started from natural causes.
I was really impressed by the colours as a result of the orange filter-The reds and greens were really red and green,and the lights were really bright just like blue LED's,never seen that before.
What about the 200+ people that have been arrested for arson?
Probably half of them are greens voters too. With another good percentage being kids that probably listened to Greta's last podcast.
In the articles one guy started 7 fires!!!
http://thedailychrenk.com/2020/01/03...-arson-crisis/
And a "different" angle on it this was also mentioned about the fires in california:
The californian one was more convincing to me actually but this still is worth mentioning imo.
https://eclinik.net/australia-bush-f...-smart-cities/
"The exact land"? Must be a bloody wide railway track.
Ancient Kiwi Weather Proverb:
Orange Sky at night, Australia is Alight.
That said, and bad taste jokes out the way - I watched a video of an Australian fire truck in the middle of a Burn over - it goes from 'Oh theres smoke, hmm the smoke looks a bit funny, OH SHIT IT'S A RAGING INFERNO OF HELLFIRE!' - The terror in the crews voices as they yell and pull the asbestos protectors down and start the Sprinkler system.
I've read about the speed of Bush Fires - but actually seeing how quickly it moved - Fucking terrifying!
Physics; Thou art a cruel, heartless Bitch-of-a-Mistress
The article posted by Katman is interesting, if at odds with everything I ever read previously. The author claims to be an ecological criminologist (that's a new one) so it may be entirely coincidental that he concludes that the environmental damage is caused by criminals.
In 1968 I was in a night charter flight across Australia, Sydney to Darwin, and seem to recall that there was almost always a fire in sight. That too was a bad year. There is hardly anybody living in most of the area we flew over so who the Hell is lighting the fires is a bit of a mystery.
"Death Of A Wombat" was a fifties recording, an award winning documentary with music. This morning I remembered hearing this on the radio many years ago so sought it out. I'm pleased to see that apparently it is now out of copyright so is available on YouTube. It describes how the different animals are effected by a bushfire and which one alone can beat the flames. There is about half an hour of it so you'll need an attention span longer than a goldfish.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eg8Aj03_yrU
There is a grey blur, and a green blur. I try to stay on the grey one. - Joey Dunlop
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