Weekend Gold Coast Bulletin

THOUGHTS TURN TO ESSENTIAL HAY ON DEVASTATED FARMS

- Christine McKee is a former NewsCorp journalist and editor who lives at Corryong, Victoria.

UNTIL this year, Victoria’s Upper Murray was the envy of Australia and one of the few areas with grass – good grass.

Hay had been trucked out of the district to Queensland for months.

But that grass became a nightmare when the Jingellic fire sent embers flying across Mt Mittamatit­e onto the farmland below.

It is difficult to comprehend the ferocity of the fires that left 160,000ha blackened, with thousands of cattle dead, more than 20 homes lost and 1000 people crowded into

Corryong’s school hall with no power. Emergency services threw everything they had at protecting Corryong on New Year’s Eve. The township survived but everything around it is gone, in a district almost completely reliant on its farming economy.

For most it is too early to contemplat­e what comes next.

I moved home to Corryong in November after eight years in Rockhampto­n.

I lived through and reported on Cyclone Oswald, Cyclone Marcia, the floods that followed Cyclone Debbie and the firestorm that saw 12,000 people evacuated from Gracemere.

It’s a highly resilient region but I learnt, particular­ly after Marcia, that once the danger has passed, what comes next is just as devastatin­g.

Rockhampto­n is still recovering nearly five years later.

On Monday this week, I got back into Corryong and stayed for two nights.

The sight is beyond confrontin­g, the smoke almost intolerabl­e, and the devastatio­n on people’s faces is heartbreak­ing.

There are some who will never recover.

Many farmers had their first sleep on Sunday night, after five days fighting spot fires and protecting their properties.

There is no relief shift coming for the farmers, and there is little help.

Now the biggest word on everyone’s mind is hay – that is what keeps hope and life itself alive.

I know of one dairy farmer who shot 90 cows and another who shot 300 head.

Others are doing everything they can to muster and try to get at least some of

their stock out to the saleyards. Earlier this week, Burrumbutt­ock Hay Runners brought 53 truckloads of hay into town and I have heard we need 20,000 bales a day, just in our district.

It is the same across fireaffect­ed areas in Victoria and New South Wales where communitie­s are desperate.

There are people who have lost it all, grown men breaking down in the street, ordinary people doing extraordin­ary things under unimaginab­le circumstan­ces, and then the thin threads of hope rising out of the ashes. The impact on these communitie­s is impossible to comprehend.

A lot of people have asked me how they can help ease the pain.

It will take years to recover, but right now the thread keeping things alive is hay.

Yesterday, Burrumbutt­ock Hayrunners founder Brendan Farrell said he did not need more volunteers; they just needed money in the bank for fuel.

On top of the bushfire emergency, Mr Farrell has 530 farmers in the Armidale area

“screaming for hay” because the drought has not gone away. On Thursday he took 151 phone calls from Armidale to Albury and says he is being pulled from pillar to post.

If you have a spare $2, $20, $200 or more, please consider making a donation to hayrunners.com.

If not, your thoughts and prayers are being felt across the isolation.

 ?? CHRISTINE MCKEE ??
CHRISTINE MCKEE

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