Authors: John Birmingham
Shortly before four o'clock the bomb went off. The same hot, dry westerly winds which appeared almost every day during the fire crisis materialised at two p.m. They blew directly over the scorched ground where Constable Hay had stamped out a fire two days earlier, and swept down into the burning maelstrom of the Illawong valley system. The fire-fighters working deep inside that cauldron noticed the change immediately. Walls of flame grew higher and moved faster. Burning embers and branches and storms of hot ash flew thicker and faster. At two-thirty Carl Caterson, visiting his parents' home, the last in Sproule Road, Illawong, saw a large fire jump a break prepared by navy personnel down near the river and travel a hundred metres towards his house in five seconds. The Caterson house had a good view of the Woronora River and Carl watched the fire tear around the face of the ridge and make for the water.
There was a bushfire brigade launch down there, on standby at the mouth of Bonnet Bay. Deputy Captain Peter Carter, who had felt the rapid increase in wind speed, watched a seven-metre tall wall of flame accelerate through bushland he and mate Scott Ireland had recently hosed down. Around three-thirty they saw the fire make the jump. The burning sparks arced over eight hundred metres to land in the dry brush. A spot fire burst into life. It was about the size, Carter thought, of a family car. Then
whooomph!
Within seconds it had detonated into a furious blaze as big as three football fields, and the whole hill beneath Woronora Crescent was alight.
Spot fires had broken out elsewhere in Como as well. As Carter and Ireland watched the start of the Glen Reserve holocaust, about two kilometres away hot ash and smoke were rising from behind the Jannali High School. This outbreak quickly spiralled out of control and engulfed twenty houses and the Como West Public School. Called to Woronora Crescent by a radio message for urgent assistance, Detective Sergeant Beresford saw a huge fireball come barrelling up from the valley below to roar over a couple of police vehicles and ignite trees on the other side of the road. At one minute to four the main body of the fire leapt right over the massive cliff face and fell on the undefended street. It took out the church down near Bindea Street first. A fire-fighter named Reid who had driven about three hundred metres along Lincoln Crescent saw that the houses at numbers 36 and 38 were going up. He travelled another fifty metres to park outside number 19. Monstrous liquid rivers of flame were pouring over the ridge line at eighty kilometres an hour and the sky was a blanket of fire three metres above him. Visibility shrank to less than two metres and spot fires ignited three houses in a row. Home owners and fire-fighters extinguished them, but then number 27 exploded in a massive roiling plume which could not be doused.
Up at 39, Richard Dickin had watched the deteriorating situation with alarm. When he saw the geyser of flame, maybe sixty metres high, which burst over the crest of the hill to incinerate the church down the street, he told his wife Mary and the two girls to get ready. They were out of there. Their house, which Richard had spent some time preparing just in case, was one of the sturdier homes in a street which still contained numerous fibro cottages from the postwar boom. It was a brick dwelling of two storeys on a strong base of Hawkesbury sandstone. It was solid, much loved and kept in immaculate condition. It would not last more than a few more minutes. Suddenly the windows blew out of neighbour David Kelk's place. Kelk, who had put considerable energy into his own precautions, rushed from the house, which was instantly filled with smoke and hot ash, to find all of the trees in his garden alight, along with his eaves and fibro fence. It was an awesome sight, but nothing compared to Dickin's house. That was an inferno. Driven back by the blistering heat, Kelk was quickly found by a couple of fire-fighters and ushered away with his wife.
Inside 39 the family and their two dogs piled into the car for a quick escape. As the garage door opened however, they were confronted by the savage cremation of the front of their house which David Kelk had just seen. Aute at the top of the drive had gone up and the furious torrent of fire blasting up from the reserve was driven right into their faces by the wind. Richard Dickin hurriedly shut the door and they fled back into the house, sheltering inside the bathroom. Knowing they couldn't stay there, Dickin went to search for an escape route through the back yard. While he was away fire burst from Catherine's bedroom. Mary, Catherine and Kylie ran from the house to follow Richard who had been forced into the pool by the intense heat. Everything that could burn was afire; trees, bushes, the house, the fencing and a pergola in the back yard. Mary, the girls and their pets ran, terrified, to the pergola where the dogs suddenly burst into flame. Richard screamed at them to get in the pool and they sprinted over, diving in and swimming for the deep end. Only Catherine and Kylie made it to Richard. As they yelled for help Mary floated a few metres away, dead from smoke inhalation.
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Fire had cursed the mysterious southern land in European imagination long before it did so in any European's experience. Thousands of years before Dutchman Dirck Hartog nailed a plate to a tree on the western coast of Australia, a Greek author named Theopomus had written confidently of a continent on the far side of the world âwhich in greatness is infinite and unmeasurable'. He pictured a utopia of green meadows and pastures, tended by mighty beasts and gigantic men, of numerous cities governed by civilized laws and ordinances. Pliny the Elder and Pomponius Mela of Rome had no doubt this place was as thickly peopled as the Mediterranean and the rest of Europe, but they were convinced no conversation would ever take place between north and south because of the tropic seas which, wrote Pliny, are âburnt and cremated by flames, scorched by the near sun'. To Mela they were an impossible barrier, a burning zone.
Fantastic reports from Carthaginian sailors who braved the West African coast as far south as Sierra Leone in 500 BC lent credence to these alarums. Hanno's crew told of ugly, wild men, incredibly strong and covered with coarse black hair, calling themselves âgorillas'; of entire lands consumed by unceasing fire; a world rendered unfit for human life by the terrible heat. The Atlantic Ocean, shrouded by heavy fogs and dust storms, was christened the Sea of Darkness while âscorching winds from the Sahara confirmed the opinion that the Tropics were an eternal barrier to human travel'.
Greek and Roman knowledge of the wider world shrivelled at the hot touch of these winds, dying out long before the equator. The furthest reach of the European mind in its first flowering was Sri Lanka, and even that was but lightly brushed and deeply misunderstood. In a map drawn by Ptolemy in the second century AD the Asian land mass continues south-east for thousands of kilometres before turning west, back towards Africa, which it rejoins. Ptolemy thus made the Indian Ocean a land-locked sea â like the Mediterranean minus the Straits of Gibraltar. Its southern waters lapped at the shores of Terra Incognita, the unknown land, at around about the same point where westerly winds pile the big breakers up against the white beaches of south-western Australia.
It wasn't until Hartog and his countrymen started bumping into West Australia in the early 1600s that Europe began to seriously consider the strategic and economic implications of a vast, uncontested land in the southern reaches of the world. The dead grey hand of the Church had smothered intellectual inquiry during the Dark Ages, consigning the work of Ptolemy and his peers to the forbidden realms of heresy. Imperial Rome had sought out distant lands and bent them to its will by force of arms. Holy Rome denied such places could even exist and bent everyone to its delusions by a reign of terror. The Bible had nothing to say about the antipodes or its inhabitants. They lay outside God's great scheme and thus they did not exist.
While Ptolemy was either reviled or forgotten, Pliny's bedtime stories fared a little better as harmless popular tales. The wastes of southern Africa served as a useful sort of allegorical tool, an imagined hell on earth with which to frighten the faithful into submission. There, where the Pope's word meant nothing, abominations were not just commonplace, they were the rule. People âlived on the milk of dog-headed apes'. Others had four heads each, or just one eye in the centre of their foreheads, or giant feet under which they could take shade from the relentless punishing heat. It was a Godforsaken wasteland of inversion and madness. Much later even Dante took the cue, emerging from âthe horrid circles of hell', he finds himself âin the Antipodes, exactly opposite Jerusalem'.
It took greed, a force as powerful as religious oppression, to break the Church's shackles. From 1615 captains of the Dutch East India Company's vessels had orders to sail a fixed course, east from the Cape of Good Hope until they found themselves below the Sunda Strait, where they were to steer north for the company's factories in Batavia. The company had calculated this route as the most likely to exploit prevailing winds and currents, but in the early seventeenth century it could not yet provide its sailors with the means to fix their positions with any real accuracy and at any rate the winds and currents were liable to shift on a whim. The result was an increasing number of lost and confused Dutchmen ploughing along the western coast of Australia, the unknown land which Ptolemy had mapped out millennia before.
The sick, sand-blasted wilderness they found seemed to bear out the ancients' warnings. It looked utterly desolate. Then Abel Tasman's epic voyage around the southern coast, Tasmania, New Zealand, Tonga, Fiji and New Guinea raised the prospect that New Holland, as it was becoming known, might produce something more useful than lonesome despair. There might even be two continents there: the wasteland in the west and a more temperate and fertile sister in the east. Alexander Dalrymple, an eighteenth-century Scottish geographer and first hydrographer of the British Admiralty, thought the land might stretch across thousands of miles, through a full 100© of longitude, making it bigger than the whole civilized part of Asia, from Turkey to the eastern extremity of China. Dalrymple was a passionate advocate of the idea of a huge, populous Great South Land, so rich that the merest scraps from its table would be âsufficient to maintain the power, dominion, and sovereignty of Britain, by employing all its manufactures and ships'. Sir George Young echoed the sentiment, writing that the variety of climates sure to be found in such a great continent would provide Britain with âalmost all the different Productions of the known World' in just one united land. Even Joseph Banks, who had first-hand knowledge of Australia's less than ideal conditions, thought a land âwhich was larger than the Whole of Europe' would furnish all manner of spices, crops and precious metals. Even so Banks was not the naive optimist those who followed him to Sydney Harbour later thought. He said it was the most barren country he had ever seen and although he recommended settlement at Botany Bay, with its plentiful supplies of fish, its fresh water and good soil âcapable of producing any kind of grain', he tempered his enthusiasm with advice that any colonists would need to carry at least a year's supplies to provide for themselves.
It turned out to be sound advice. When the First Fleet dropped anchor in Botany Bay in the first days of 1788, their initial joy at having made the dangerous passage without severe loss of life soon curdled into disappointment that the fine meadows and babbling streams of Banks's and Cook's journals seemed to be a chimera. The earlier navigators had arrived during a particularly wet week in autumn, while the First Fleet, long delayed in Portsmouth, dropped anchor during the hottest, driest part of a very hot, dry year. On 19 January, with only the
Supply
,
Scarborough
,
Alexander
and
Friendship
in the bay, Governor Phillip took a small boat about ten kilometres up a river which drained into the northwest of the bay and found âthe country low and boggy with no appearance of fresh water'. They retreated to try their luck with another inlet in the south-west, rowing ashore for a lunch of salt beef and porter at which they drank the health of absent friends before trekking inland. This time Phillip and his men found just âone little rivulet of fresh water'. These were the first hard lessons in a re-education which would take more than two hundred years. They were not in England any more and could not look at this land through a glass tinted by life in a cold, wet climate. When Phillip took some marines ashore to begin clearing ground, to rip up the grasses and hack down the trees which held the thin soils in place, the natives, with whom they'd had good dealings so far, turned ugly. Perhaps they understood, even if intuitively, the dire results of the white man's behaviour.
Surgeon John White, who wrote that the safe arrival of all the ships on 20 January âwas a sight truly pleasant, and at which every heart must rejoice', soon complained that their anchorage didn't deserve any of the praises âbestowed on it by the much-lamented Cook'. It was âsandy, poor, and swampy, and but very indifferently supplied with water'. Of Cook's fine meadows, White could see none, though he assured his readers he âtook some pains to find them'. Hunter surveyed the bay for anchorages, finding a few of good depth but exposed to the easterly winds which blew straight in, setting up âa prodigious sea'. And those few places which were sheltered from the rough swell were too shallow to be of much use.
That evening Arthur Bowes Smyth, a surgeon on the
Lady Penrhyn
, dragged a fishing net around the north side with some success. But after just a short time in the country he was sanguine. This might seem a fertile spot, he suggested, with âgreat numbers of very large and lofty trees reaching almost to the water's edge', and with the space between those trees seemingly covered by grass; but closer inspection revealed the grass to be âlong and coarse, the trees very large and in general hollow, and the wood itself' to be fit for nothing but the fire. The soil which supported this poor verdure was really nothing but sand, teeming with huge black and red ants which were inclined to inflict a painful bite on the curious and unwary. By the time the mullet and bream which Bowes Smyth had hauled up were finished and the last bones picked from his shipmates' teeth, Phillip had concluded that Botany Bay was unsuitable for settlement and was planning to move north to Port Jackson where, despite their initial disillusionment, the English were once again quickly charmed and just as quickly misled by appearances.