Climate Change in Rural Australia: Natural Hazard Preparedness and Recovery Needs of a Rural Community
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Design
2.2. Participants
2.3. Procedure
Interviews
2.4. Data Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Preparedness
3.1.1. Community Preparedness
As a Whole Our Community’s Not Ready
and if it’s not on your land you can’t, my neighbour had grass higher than me, nothing I can do about it and that puts me at risk
I think the thing that was sort of stood out to me anyway um when the evacuation order came people didn’t know what to do they didn’t know where to go
I couldn’t ring anybody to you know help you had to drive all the way to the intersection to make a phone call back and forwards back and forwards
It was by luck, it wasn’t by good management
It’ll Come around a Cycle
I’m not really a big believer of climate change. I’m more of a cycles you know and whether something else that makes the cycles longer harder stronger or whatever I don’t know
I think everyone’s terrified. I think before everyone would have thought oh you know we won’t have fires again for years. You know before you know it used to be probably a fifteen twenty-year cycle kind of thing. Now I think people are going wow this could just happen again
So, you’ve got to go and say, not that this won’t happen again, you know, but this only happens once every 25 years
3.1.2. Individual Preparedness
We Were Prepared
Our place was tidy and green like we were prepared
Yeah but as a whole our community’s not ready. Like if you drive into our village the only place that you can save is our school every other building there, they’re overgrown, they’re not defendable even if their house is tidied their neighbours aren’t
we were really prepared in a certain sense with the houses and different things and we had evacuation plans
Ready for Next Time
non-flammable, um, plantings, you know, in, in the garden. Um, and again, you know, just, um, I‘ve sort of upgraded my, my, um, sprinkler system, and I‘m actually just going to sort of, um, I haven’t finished with it yet, but eventually I‘ll be able to just put sprinklers on the roof. Um, and I‘ll set my pump running, and then have a separate tank for that, where the, where the, when the water runs off from the roof, it just goes back into the tank, and then runs through the pump. Yeah, and then if you need to leave, you just leave that going
if there was a fire tomorrow um we’d have trouble but no I think we’d be alright I think we’d have a much better understanding of um of what we’d have to do to minimise our losses um and a lot of what we’ve rebuilt is from fire resistant materials so that’s a lot of our fencing and yards and stuff would um would fare a lot better
3.1.3. Mental Preparedness
yeah I think what mentally prepared you was actually seeing that fire hahaha
Oh, look for me being mentally prepared is being physically prepare
3.2. Mental Health
3.2.1. We Don’t Talk about It
I know that, I haven’t really talked to people much about their experience of the fire, um or fires and drought, and um … I sort of, um mainly because I think it hasn’t been raised with me. And I‘m probably not very much inclined to sort of asking people, you know, um unless they, you know, sort of invite that um conversation
when the help finally come it was too late like our kids talking to the kids it was great like don’t get me wrong the [organisations] or whoever brought stuff to them had good intentions but it was too late it just brought our kids back to that moment
the fires came up then um so you know it does come up but not really in general conversations um and I honestly try and steer it away when it does come up because like I was saying before we just really tried to move on and not think about it too much anymore or not talk about it too much
oh, farmers are not very good at talking about those kind of things or they weren’t they probably don’t want to admit that they need some help or that they’ve got some residual hang ups or anxiety
3.2.2. Residual Anxiety
Yeah, I suppose its sort of something that plays on your mind for a while
there was a fire truck blazing all the sirens going … ooo in the mirrors where’s that fire where’s that fire where’s that fire totally freak out I didn’t see any smoke when I was driving out and talking to myself you just got on high alert
4. Discussion
Strengths, Limitations, and Directions for Future Research
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Pike, C.E.; Lykins, A.D.; Bartik, W.; Tully, P.J.; Cosh, S.M. Climate Change in Rural Australia: Natural Hazard Preparedness and Recovery Needs of a Rural Community. Climate 2024, 12, 57. https://doi.org/10.3390/cli12050057
Pike CE, Lykins AD, Bartik W, Tully PJ, Cosh SM. Climate Change in Rural Australia: Natural Hazard Preparedness and Recovery Needs of a Rural Community. Climate. 2024; 12(5):57. https://doi.org/10.3390/cli12050057
Chicago/Turabian StylePike, Caitlin E., Amy D. Lykins, Warren Bartik, Phillip J. Tully, and Suzanne M. Cosh. 2024. "Climate Change in Rural Australia: Natural Hazard Preparedness and Recovery Needs of a Rural Community" Climate 12, no. 5: 57. https://doi.org/10.3390/cli12050057
APA StylePike, C. E., Lykins, A. D., Bartik, W., Tully, P. J., & Cosh, S. M. (2024). Climate Change in Rural Australia: Natural Hazard Preparedness and Recovery Needs of a Rural Community. Climate, 12(5), 57. https://doi.org/10.3390/cli12050057