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Wednesday, February 1, 2012

Fire


I pulled off the N7 late on Saturday afternoon for a couple of minutes to photograph the water tanks below. To the left lay the stripped summer wheatfields, with a haze of blue mountains behind them. To the right the white watertanks, the windmill, and the thick wall of distant smoke which I later learned was issuing from the fire beginning to rage near Wellington and the beautiful Bainskloof. 

That fire has now been fought for three days with seven helicopters including two Oryx lent to the struggle by the air force. The main concern is property damage - there are people, homes and farms in the area, but I am not sure that it is a bad thing for the fynbos, which requires fire for regeneration and also for the germination of many plants. I don't know when last that area experienced a burn. 

Too-frequent fires are bad; similarly, long intervals without fire cause the vegetation to senesce. Ironicallly, both conditions are caused by humans: Cigarette butts, arson, and accident on the one hand, and zealous fire fighting and -prevention on the other. Just how fynbos evolved to require fire I don't know. This is not lightning country, but perhaps it was long, long ago. Perhaps ancient hunter gatherers were careless with their sparks. Since humans and fire came from Africa, perhaps it is fitting that this country needs flames in order to renew itself. 

Does this make a case for burning one's bridges?

No retreat, no retreat; they must conquer or die who have no retreat.

I wrote that in the back of my planner when I was 16. Had I read A Modern Comedy? What was chasing me? School. I hated school.


Not that I need to retreat. It's just where fire leads one.

5 comments:

  1. Let's, for the moment,pretend you are in Australia.

    It's not a very big leap, is it?


    Blogger is being silly again, hence my different identity

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  2. The California chapparrel requires burning for renewal as well. Unfortunately for humans, they build homes on the edges of canyons and the tops of mountains that become flammable tinder, especially after a very wet spring followed by a drought.

    I love it that the seeds of the wild plants are fireproof. These photos are stunning.

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  3. Your pictures remind me of the Cilliers poem our English teacher (ironically) taught us in Std 7: dis die blond, / dis die blou: / dis die veld, / dis die lug; / en 'n voël draai bowe in eensame vlug - / dis al.

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    Replies
    1. This is to me the perfect poem. I thought it was A.G Visser.

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  4. dinahmow...am I pretending I'm in Australia because of bush fires?

    BowStreet - Thank you! I have always loved the word chaparral. It is so evocative. Seeds of some fynbos plants will not burst open until they have been burned...

    Ah, puccagrrl you read my mind. I recently posted one like that on Facebook.

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