'It was only a couple of weeks ago that I was camped under the myrtles there, nestled into a shady nook with a gas cooker and a cheap tent. The river ran with that honey-colour that you find out west – it gives you a fake tan when you wade into it. I pocketed a few beautiful rocks from its banks and its bed. Skipping down the latticework of tree roots that led to the water’s edge, I caught a glimpse of a male pink robin, whistling away on a moss-covered branch, dressed gorgeously.
Now it seems that it’s all gone, all that wet forest along the Donaldson River. So too the huge tracts of rainforest north of the Pieman River, with slow-growing huon pines strewn throughout it, habitat for sea-eagles, masked owls and Tasmanian devils. I was also on the Pieman, kayaking downstream in a squall to a waterfall that had turned into a piddle off a ledge. Liverworts and fungi caught the eye. Currawongs and black cockatoos chuckled and heckled in the canopy. I picked up a biscuity bit of broken branch that was coated in moss and lichen; it floated on the river, having been carried down a minor creek. So much green there has now been reduced to a blackened crisp.
A few days after we left the west coast, a swathe of lightning strikes had cut in a sickle-shape across the island. It’s been dry in Tassie. It doesn’t take much to start a fire and once it gets moving, it’s hard to stop. The first hints of a blaze go unnoticed for a few days in unpopulated landscapes. The wind has swirled around, frustrating the firies’ efforts. It hasn’t rained. When you look at the map, the affected sections form weird blobs, sprawled out like slime moulds around the Road to Nowhere, Mount Meredith, Mount Pelion West, Canning Peak.
And you do, you look at the map. You look at it incessantly, you keep up-to-date even though there is no blaze within cooee of where you live or work. The information brings no comfort, but you are drawn to it anyway.
That summer I was hit with a type of anxiety and stress that I’d not experienced before. I didn’t quite have the reflective skill or words for it, and didn’t quite comprehend how palpable was my sense that something was going wrong. “The rainforests are fucked,” I spat at someone who didn’t understand why I was so upset. Some poet I was! But the words told a lot: I was anguished and I didn’t have a handle on my emotions.
When it comes to fire ecology, Tassie is a tricky place. Fire has been a common and frequent element of life here for many millennia. Plenty of plant species are adapted to arid conditions; some reproduce through fire, dropping seeds into the nutrient-rich ash beds that are left behind. But there are also flora communities that evolved when this land mass was further south, cooler, wetter, and less exposed to bushfires. These have survived mostly in the mountains, where there’s a lot of rainfall and the temperatures rarely rise too high. They are remnants of an ancient time and as such they are, to me, something close to sacred.
The places that held these beautiful plants – their roots deep in the planet’s history – might not survive the century.
I was also in close contact with fires in 2019. Once again, I was bushwalking when the fires broke out – I heard the storm from a lakeside campsite and saw ominous plumes rising as I got to a ridgeline the next morning. Within hours, a helicopter came to evacuate us. As we rose into the air, it became obvious that there were dozens of fires in the area. The air was choked with dark haze.
One evening a few weeks later, I was at a pub in town with a bunch of fellow bushwalking guides. The sky broke into a spattering of rain. We cheered. In the time that it took for us to run outside, the rain had stopped. It was one of the most dispiriting moments of my life, like the weather spirits had taken to mocking us.
As well as the west coast forests, the Overland Track is on fire again. Yesterday I received a text from an ex-colleague of mine, telling me that one of the huts in which we’d worked had burnt down.
It was inevitable, really. I’ve known for years that something like this was bound to happen – not by some special form of prescience, I just listened to people who were watching the patterns, who knew more than me. It’s unfortunate this disaster has dovetailed with a decreasing political will to tackle the problems that beset our planet’s ecological processes. Our electorates get weirder as the climate goes more haywire.
I am not so much spitting caustic speech any more. I walk around in a daze that I can these days recognise as an expression of grief.
As far as I can tell, in the future we will lose much more of the land that we have loved. Apparently all there is to do is to love it, nevertheless.'
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