Comments
SpookyTreeFrog t1_j3xilp8 wrote
lol same I was like ohhr noor
clandestineVexation t1_j3xqy2f wrote
aur naur…emmah!
adube440 t1_j3yivl5 wrote
Oi noi!
spacembracers t1_j3y9a9k wrote
Yeh nah, nah yeh
Danredman t1_j3zkvsd wrote
Oh Naur!
TheFAPnetwork t1_j3y95nh wrote
Or mosquitos
MrHazard1 t1_j3ykhfk wrote
I was actually waiting for australian forest fire news, because it's summer there.
Lurker12386354676 t1_j3yw6vl wrote
Probably not for another year or two, at least for a big one. They're pretty well on a half decade schedule.
[deleted] t1_j3z4c5z wrote
[removed]
[deleted] t1_j4026av wrote
[removed]
SoulSearchingRaven t1_j3w6p5w wrote
That’s neat 😊
NeatWhiskeyPlease t1_j3x4ls2 wrote
You can tell it’s neat by the way it is!
Dead_before_dessert t1_j3yu9cm wrote
I just think its neat!
wackelzahnjoe t1_j40s7hx wrote
neat
Alas_Babylonz t1_j3x6v9w wrote
I was in Woomera, Australia when the horrific drought of 1982/83 ended. After the rains finally came that Spring (October) the smell was striking and incredible! Somewhat stinky but vibrant. Rot and new growth at the same time.
theflyingkiwi00 t1_j3yi540 wrote
I enjoy that smell, it's like the smell of life.
hack_the_interbutts t1_j402mio wrote
And death... Can you really have one without the other?
radgepack t1_j408yb5 wrote
Not if you're a eukaryotic
_xcee t1_j40clyv wrote
yeah okay nurgle
hack_the_interbutts t1_j40ddbp wrote
I mean the original comment did say stinky and vibrant, rot and new growth.
LordDinglebury t1_j40hkd3 wrote
Petrichor!
ranchwriter t1_j41aijg wrote
I learned this word from a Daily’s gas station word of the day.
warrant2k t1_j3wn8ei wrote
Californiain here. Expect lush greenery, then it'll dry out with no more rain, then wildfires that go unchecked.
If you have mountains there are bonus mudslides.
razor_eddie t1_j3xge64 wrote
>then wildfires
Largest ever Californian wildfire was just over a million acres. In 2020. That year, the wildfires burned just over 4 million acres. Which was a record.
https://www.fire.ca.gov/media/4jandlhh/top20_acres.pdf
In Aus, in 2020, bushfires burned about 10 times as much acreage (46 million). A bad year, but not the worst.
In the last 20 years, the 99 million acre one in the Northern Territory.
THe 1974-5 season took out 290 million acres. (The state of California is 104 million acres in size).
Trust me, Australian bushfires make californian ones look tiny.
The bad season in 2020, the Southern Alps in New Zealand got a fair dusting of ash from the Australian bushfires. That;s like getting the ash from a California fire in Arkansas.
Australian trees (eucalypts) have evolved to survive bushfires, there are that many of them. Australia does bushfires worse than anyone else.
sanemartigan t1_j3y3xk5 wrote
It was more about saying they're from cali.
razor_eddie t1_j3y4pcm wrote
Like vegans or people with hobby farms?
fleebleganger t1_j403g0y wrote
Or people with palatine. Damnit, autocorrect. Those fancy bikes that “had a scandal” when they came out because of something in the ad. Whenever someone owns one it’s not an exercise bike it’s a “peligrini”.
[deleted] t1_j3zffsi wrote
[removed]
Rosie2jz t1_j3zac2f wrote
Remember when we convinced California to import Eucalyptus trees and then they ran wild and took over and now Cali's bushfires are 10x worse then they ever were? California wildfires are pretty similar to ours and both our fire fighters share training, personal and equipment during bad seasons.
razor_eddie t1_j3zfelb wrote
Yeah, they're a trap, eucalypts. Excellent firewood, mind you.
And Aus and Canada and Cali (and NZ) sharing firefighters every year is a heartwarming thing.
Hfino t1_j3zvuny wrote
Same thing happened in Portugal. The country with the most eucalyptus per sqm in the world.
Ethicaldreamer t1_j3ypens wrote
Are you saying we should nuke Australia since their forest fires cause so many emissions? Noted
razor_eddie t1_j3yrxy2 wrote
You want radioactive drop bears?
Because that's how you get radioactive drop bears.
Ethicaldreamer t1_j3yvr6d wrote
Had to search what a drop bear is. Someone needs to fix the wiki page for it to better explain that they are real, and will eat your face.
PerriX2390 t1_j3yxfxj wrote
> Someone needs to fix the wiki page for it to better explain that they are real, and will eat your face.
Of course they're real. Thankfully just a bit of vegemite behind your ear and they'll leave you alone when bushwalking.
-stuey- t1_j40016u wrote
Don’t tell him about the hoop snakes
AR96-BDB t1_j40tkq1 wrote
Don't quote me, but I remember reading somewhere that so much vegetation was burnt in Australia's December 2019-january 2020 bushfire that the ash plumes cooled the planet 0.25-0.5 Celsius, owing to it blocking the sun partially.
Again, I'm not sure if it was real or just nonsense.
razor_eddie t1_j428oco wrote
Wouldn't surprise me. If a volcanic eruption can do it (Tambora in indonesia erupted in 1815, which lead to the "year without summer" because of particulates in the atmosphere.
WikiSummarizerBot t1_j428q29 wrote
>The year 1816 is known as the Year Without a Summer because of severe climate abnormalities that caused average global temperatures to decrease by 0. 4–0. 7 °C (0. 7–1 °F).
^([ )^(F.A.Q)^( | )^(Opt Out)^( | )^(Opt Out Of Subreddit)^( | )^(GitHub)^( ] Downvote to remove | v1.5)
[deleted] t1_j3xo4kr wrote
[removed]
Acceptable_Figure624 t1_j3wpahv wrote
You must be a hoot at parties.
throwawayforyouzzz t1_j3wpr8z wrote
The owls will burn too, in a wildfire caused by a gender revealing party. It shall come to pass.
contra_account t1_j3wzfy7 wrote
What gender is the baby? Oh, it's a fire 🔥
[deleted] t1_j3xcge4 wrote
[deleted]
Glutenous t1_j3xrctj wrote
Oh just you know… fire hawks
TheGardenNymph t1_j3xqe2m wrote
This is part of the desert cycle in many parts of Australia, the landscape and ecosystem is used to heavy rains up north flowing down for hundreds of kilometres along existing river beds, many towns expect these yearly flood cycles that bring large scale animal migration, it's been happening for hundreds of years. Australia is not California.
Fullonski t1_j3xy0ml wrote
Australian here, thanks for telling us how climate cycles work. We’re pretty inexperienced with the whole floods and subsequent wildfires thing here, so any advice is appreciated. 🙄
alldressed_chip t1_j3y34xu wrote
lmao californian here, and I think original commenter is very much in “buckle up” mode rn - it’s been a little wet here recently 🤪 can’t wait to see what that means!! hottest ticket in town
FarfarsFav t1_j3wvz25 wrote
But what’s traffic like on the 105?
warrant2k t1_j3wz295 wrote
As expected, a parking lot.
chipsinsideajar t1_j3x36sa wrote
The 405 too
And the 110
And the 15
And the 210
And some random backroad in Industry cause a truck fell over again
warrant2k t1_j3x4dn2 wrote
Singin' the song of my people.
vacuum_everyday t1_j3xayve wrote
Serious question: why do Californians add “the” in front of everything, but especially freeways?Up north we just call it I-15. As in “I-15 is jammed with hours long delays.” Other freeways are just their number.
But “THE 15” setup is a dead giveaway they’re from California.
Blargcar t1_j3xjvbx wrote
Because Los Angeles and southern California had freeways before a lot of the country. Instead of numbers at first they had names like: The San Diego freeway, the Pasadena freeway, the long beach freeway. The San Diego freeway became the 405, Pasadena became 110 and long beach became 710, along with Ventura freeway (101).
So people were used to saying THE then the name. Then when they became numbers they were used to saying THE then the number. It makes sense when you think of it and know the history.
drop_phone_on_face t1_j3xw12b wrote
Oh, we do that in the UK too.
handyandy727 t1_j3xbs8f wrote
My wife is from California and still can't explain that. Maybe it's because state highways are so big too? Like Highway 90 is basically an interstate in size. I dunno.
ETA: We live in KY, and we just say "65" or "71". We omit the "I-" but don't use THE unless it's a parkway or expressway.
Blargcar t1_j3xkcu5 wrote
handyandy727 t1_j3xnb18 wrote
Today I learned.
Oryxhasnonuts t1_j3xdd9c wrote
[deleted] t1_j3xdo5u wrote
[removed]
[deleted] t1_j3xrztu wrote
[removed]
God_Damnit_Nappa t1_j3ysvuj wrote
If you're going somewhere you'd say something like "I'm on the freeway." I assume it's a similar reason. Like "I'm on the 405." It sounds weird to leave out "the." I don't personally buy the "well the freeways were named before they had numbers" explanation but I suppose that's a better reason that "just because."
Lurker12386354676 t1_j3ywt7n wrote
Fuck thank god we've got the seppos to warn us about bushfires, never would have thought about it hey.
alabamdiego t1_j3zzyhf wrote
Lmfao did you just firesplain wildfires to fucking Australia?? I think they know all about it.
A_Brown_Crayon t1_j3wxfpc wrote
Who asked
RollUpTheRimJob t1_j3xbbyl wrote
Major shifts in ecosystems are not uplifting
TheGardenNymph t1_j3xqkja wrote
Actually this desert cycle has been happening for hundreds of years, it's fairly unique to Australia. I commented more information above.
[deleted] t1_j3y9dst wrote
[removed]
SirActionSack t1_j3yeumw wrote
Plenty of plants in Australia require or benefit from fire.
-LVS t1_j3y7zxx wrote
Normally I’d agree, but we’re on /r/upliftingnews. I come here to be uplifted
[deleted] t1_j3wnzve wrote
[deleted]
[deleted] t1_j3xnqwi wrote
[removed]
[deleted] t1_j3yc904 wrote
[removed]
[deleted] t1_j3yn68f wrote
[removed]
[deleted] t1_j3ypj6q wrote
[removed]
[deleted] t1_j3z6h8b wrote
[removed]
TheFlashFrame t1_j3z4omn wrote
As a Californian did you think it was weird to see a bunch of Aborigines throwing up Westside signs?
yodippiddy t1_j3wytl3 wrote
Looks like bad news for the new max max movie production.
N-ShadowFrog t1_j3xk68m wrote
Might actually be kinda cool. Like maybe not for mad max but it would be a great setting for a post apocalyptic world where the earth is actively healing and the people fight over whether it’s time to stop and settle down or continue their wandering ways.
Comeonjeffrey0193 t1_j3xr1xp wrote
You should play Fallout New Vegas, the game is basically that concept.
eskimobob225 t1_j3xwdys wrote
Snowpiercer is basically this
The_souLance t1_j3ztrnv wrote
Willy Wonka pt2?
[deleted] t1_j3ydrdj wrote
[removed]
DorisCrockford t1_j3xiitt wrote
Relaxed Max
Aern t1_j3xpt6x wrote
This is underrated.
CaravelClerihew t1_j3xpmth wrote
A similar event was actually why Fury Road moved production to Africa. It was meant to be shot in Australia.
That being said, I'm pretty sure the new movie is done filming.
natalieloben t1_j3zjlqs wrote
Fury Road was partly shot in Aus too. They used props from and locations around the museum in Broken Hill.
-stuey- t1_j3zzkiq wrote
They also shot in Queensland near my house
is0ph OP t1_j3xvb3x wrote
No problem! Rebranded as Waterworld II.
MeyhamM2 t1_j3xfhty wrote
Mad Max has a Vacation
[deleted] t1_j3xlgxy wrote
[removed]
argothedog t1_j3xhqqz wrote
They already shifted the last one to Namibia for similar reasons
natalieloben t1_j3zjfdo wrote
It'll be fine. My friends run the Mad Max 2 museum where it was filmed just outside Broken Hill and their habitat remains pretty consistent.
account_not_valid t1_j410uf3 wrote
Mildly Miffed Max
ashera_spectre t1_j3xgfiv wrote
"Local fauna is florishing."
The picture shows a real pissed off bearded dragon, haha.
I am sure he's happy about all the blossoming life and food from the rain, though.
HiveMynd148 t1_j40rrng wrote
the only way we can tell it's Australia is the fact that the Bearded dragon IS Pissed af
informativebitching t1_j411oy5 wrote
Like an Australian grumpy cat
blueberriessmoothie t1_j40nw2i wrote
I’m not sure if more pissed or mercilessly and mockingly judging the photographer: “you think you’re better than me?”
JustLikeJD t1_j3y1nt6 wrote
As an Australian I always take this news with a grain of salt. This is years in the making and often catastrophic fooling and weather events make way for this.
Likewise we are teetering in the verge of moving back into La Nino and if that happens then all this greenery will dry up very quickly and fuel the next round of bushfires.
I live rural and the amount of unkept and I trimmed greenery that’s grown over the last 12 months is very concerning. In my area there hasn’t been a lot of burn offs either.
Ididitfordalolz t1_j3z3e9t wrote
Fellow Aussie, also live rural. We’ve had bushfires reach one ridge over from our house, have a water pump and tank just for fires and the dam at the dairy farm opposite us is used by the water choppers. Even with all that, it’s gonna be another sketchy one folks
JustLikeJD t1_j3zg20x wrote
I know that worry. We’ve just moved about 30 mins out of the closest rural town and our property where we are at has a seperate tank to pump into from the river next to us to help fight fires with a seperate petrol pump so it’s isolated from our homes power system. Still makes us uneasy.
Original_End2444 t1_j40hgq8 wrote
Did it cross your mind to move somewhere safer rather than more dangerous?
JustLikeJD t1_j40htaj wrote
It’s not just that easy. Money is a major issue for most to just up and leave.
We’re in a rental shortage in Australia. A pretty dire one actually. We got our current property on the back of a recommendation to the landlord from some family friends. There’re were only two other rentals going at that time in our closest town (9,000 residents).
I work a very specific job (caseworker for young offenders) and I’m able to have security here because there is a high demand for workers like myself in rural areas.
Last time we had a bushfire season even major cities were having runaway fires get fairly close to suburbia.
Ididitfordalolz t1_j41yqzf wrote
Any idea what this safer mumbo jumbo is about?
Fr tho, what is “safer” for Aus. Fires, floods, cyclones, etc. nowhere is safe. Combine that with the rental shortage and boom!? options evaporate
JustLikeJD t1_j43ui5h wrote
Exactly
Silent_Ensemble t1_j42z9aw wrote
Build a boat lol
Silent_Ensemble t1_j42z2q2 wrote
Of course it did, it obviously wasn’t that simple. No one is purposefully moving somewhere more dangerous when they have better options
ReasonablyBadass t1_j3wia9u wrote
How long will it last? Will some of the water fill aquifers?
is0ph OP t1_j3wqeuu wrote
The frogs will fill back their water bubble where they will remain for years until the next rain or flood.
account_not_valid t1_j4119kf wrote
Damn Tiddalik! Drinking all the water and not leaving any for the other animals.
Bring in the dancing snake!
Livefox96 t1_j3ws76d wrote
Some of it will. The rest of it will quickly be used by farmers to water fields because they're allowed to use way too much water
AcerRubrum t1_j3xuryz wrote
There's no farms near Alice Springs. It's surrounded by desert for hundreds of kilometers on all sides.
diagnosedwolf t1_j3yt3l0 wrote
Of course there are. There’s Yambah Station, and a bunch of other farms around the town. Cattle and stuff, I think. Definitely camels.
[deleted] t1_j3z6u3i wrote
[removed]
rainforestparadise t1_j40axp3 wrote
Are camel farms the ones using all the water or is it crops?
diagnosedwolf t1_j40d6hh wrote
It’s cattle.
[deleted] t1_j3xx721 wrote
[removed]
[deleted] t1_j3ypf7n wrote
[removed]
[deleted] t1_j3z9k82 wrote
[removed]
Snowchain-x2 t1_j3wjmy8 wrote
I'm thinking there's a lot more water where this stuff came from
fish_whisperer t1_j3wxtil wrote
You mean the sky?
Snowchain-x2 t1_j3wyhum wrote
I'm glad someone's worked it out
uruguay2609 t1_j3y8ir7 wrote
Meanwhile, close to my country, and the Amazon forest, we are experiencing one of the worst drought in history
Pelsi t1_j3z0eqn wrote
We are swinging into a neutral ENSO period right now though, which should be good-ish news for both of us (Australia and S. America) for a while… until El Niño hits of course.
deadheadlinenmustfly t1_j3yx5m8 wrote
Nice. It reminds me of when my wife and I flew into Alice Springs in March of 2000. "The Wet" had been unusually so in the outback and there were lots of green plants around. On the descent, the pilot wecomed us all to "Australia's _green_ center."
Feebeeps t1_j3xv207 wrote
Sky of blue and sea of green?
LittleDrumminBoy t1_j4024uj wrote
Every one of us has all we need!
Phluffhead024 t1_j40it1l wrote
In our yellow submarine!
Ghostpumpkin t1_j3zmb2y wrote
As someone who lives in Western Australia, I'm glad at least Alice did alright with the extra rain. The Fitzroy river flooding is pretty devastating from the same ex-tropical cyclone. Its 50km wide in areas apparently and some towns will be completely inaccessible by road for many months.
Trinidadnomads t1_j3y986z wrote
Thats beautiful
zeno82 t1_j3zmh0a wrote
Nobody else amused by the name "Todd River"?
Not sure why, just sounds like some colonist was having a go at a friend.
"Hey, Todd, finally found a place as wet as your bed sheets, you nerd. Naming it Todd River after ya".
parsifal t1_j3xplvl wrote
Wow, Google says it would take me 2 days and one hour to get to the Red Centre.
Ididitfordalolz t1_j3z3ja8 wrote
And that’s if you survive!
Footbeard t1_j3y94tb wrote
This is beautiful but there isn't water to sustain this. Wide corridors need to be cleared to prevent a repeat of the bushfires we experienced fewer than 5 years ago
El Nino is likely gonna hit us halfway through the year and we need to be prepared so more than half our country doesn't catch fire again.
The cycle of growth & decay is remarkable & it's very important for us to learn from the land
southaussiewaddy t1_j3yunie wrote
Beautiful! A well needed drink.
sarcasiman t1_j3yuoly wrote
"Over the past week, parts of the central-west of the Northern Territory have received between 200 and 300 millimetres of rain, while Alice Springs Airport received 84mm in the 24 hours to 9am Monday."
Converted: 7.87" , 11.81" and 3.3" (in order of appearance.)
InadmissibleHug t1_j3zw23z wrote
When I went to visit Uluṟu in 2001, it wasn’t long after a wet event.
The roads were delightfully edged by desert flowers, it was so pretty!
MtnMaiden t1_j3zyvpx wrote
Billabong. A pool/pond made from flooding.
Never swim in one due to crocodiles.
HanMaBoogie t1_j3xaw4t wrote
Now I know where to sail my yellow submarine.
nzdennis t1_j3yf9lx wrote
Crocs swimming up the road
Ididitfordalolz t1_j3z4azj wrote
Sigh not again. Hey Dav-o grab the big stick again! Gotta teach these chunky pricks not to use my lawn as a sunning spot!
Fr though. Have had crocs swimming on my previous property during floods. Also big fuck off pythons🤷🏼♀️
nzdennis t1_j3zzdsw wrote
Oh yeah of course the bloody snakes come out as well!
Ididitfordalolz t1_j41zxu5 wrote
Of course! Why not join the party of scaled annoyances!
MarauderGaming t1_j40r9e1 wrote
As a colour blind person on the red green side of things. I see no difference
is0ph OP t1_j41etbh wrote
This ecosystem should make efforts on the accessibility front. It’s not passing WCAG at the moment.
AutoModerator t1_j3vugdt wrote
Reminder: this subreddit is meant to be a place free of excessive cynicism, negativity and bitterness. Toxic attitudes are not welcome here.
All Negative comments will be removed and will possibly result in a ban.
I am a bot, and this action was performed automatically. Please contact the moderators of this subreddit if you have any questions or concerns.
[deleted] t1_j3waoit wrote
[removed]
BrutusGregori t1_j3xkpaa wrote
My uncles place out in Joshua tree is going crazy will all the flowers coming in.
His wash behind his house is like a river.
This is the high desert of California. All this water around the world is causing so many problems but it sure is awe inducing.
[deleted] t1_j3xss9c wrote
[removed]
The_Bearded_Doctor t1_j3xw5mc wrote
“Life, uh, finds a way”
CarlsbergCuddles t1_j3yn7mv wrote
This has the Nats and Cotton farmers licking their lips....
MarcusP2 t1_j3zf83l wrote
I just saw an article about the NT being the new frontier for cotton farming. Lots of land being illegally cleared already. Smh
Jlx_27 t1_j3yxunx wrote
Just like ancient times! Ahh the good old days eh?
brad_987 t1_j3zp212 wrote
Now the crocs can go anywhere
mvyrmnd t1_j3ztqin wrote
I'd love to see Trephina Gorge full of water like this.
berger034 t1_j404tef wrote
This is going to be California soon. Rainfall is like 300% of what we get in the year.
zpool_scrub_aquarium t1_j40svxn wrote
Seeing this makes me very gay (happy)
throwawaysscc t1_j425rrb wrote
Nicely played, environment!
Amithrius t1_j3xan4s wrote
So they're saying it's invigorating?
[deleted] t1_j3zgn2u wrote
[deleted]
StarxStone t1_j3y4ol2 wrote
Yeah I've been seeing Australia is doing great weatherwise this year
Spocks-Nephew t1_j3xneln wrote
Climate change is awesome.
SirWhatsalot t1_j3ww0t3 wrote
A Major shift like this is not good news. To me it's like "good news everyone! It's now not as cold in the winter!" Aka the planet is just beginning to boil but hasn't yet.
CaptainMagnets t1_j3wzw5w wrote
Isn't it summer there though?
Deadpotatoz t1_j3x11qv wrote
It's currently summer in the southern hemisphere yeah.
basementdiplomat t1_j3xn8fc wrote
38° projected on Sat
[deleted] t1_j3ypsq4 wrote
[removed]
[deleted] t1_j3xazuh wrote
[deleted]
horseren0ir t1_j40alfa wrote
Someone tell Tassie
[deleted] t1_j3wzxjs wrote
[removed]
SirWhatsalot t1_j3xb76x wrote
The warmer winter I ment in general regardless of where you are, but yes, it is summer there, but if all of the sudden people were happy death valley in the US was blooming I would not be thrilled , in fact I would be terrified of what this means and for what's about to start happening and becoming the "new normal".
razor_eddie t1_j3xhh35 wrote
You know that the frogs who are adapted to these sort of events will be welcoming the rain, to fill up their water bubbles for the next dry season?
The last hundred years in Australia have been unusually dry. This greening is both welcome and expected, and not a "major shift" of any sort.
CaptainMagnets t1_j3xcc42 wrote
I see what you're saying, sorry about that.
SirWhatsalot t1_j3yey2m wrote
It's all good. Text based communication is difficult.
is0ph OP t1_j3xvt68 wrote
If there are frogs waiting for water in the sand, there was flooding before… Australian climate has huge variations even without climate change, that’s why the country is also at high risk from its effects.
StoneTwin t1_j3w6yq9 wrote
So a part of the country that isn't massively exploited for industrial resources is able to sometime look pretty when people ignore it but it gets a bit of incidental water?
This reeks of trying to make Australia sound good environmentally when they have a lot of hard work to actually fix their situation.
midmon t1_j3w8wt7 wrote
There's no agenda either way dude. It's just newsworthy because Central Australia isn't usually flooded. It's not meant to be this way, it's literally a desert and has been for thousands of years. If anything it's indicative of the climate crisis, not the other way around.
Zero_Griever t1_j3wcfsb wrote
Watch how you're swinging that logic stick around, you might smack somebody.
[deleted] t1_j3wd11e wrote
[removed]
[deleted] t1_j3z9j8d wrote
[removed]
Klaus0225 t1_j3wqphc wrote
This comment reeks of reading way too much into things.
[deleted] t1_j3w8nh8 wrote
[removed]
[deleted] t1_j3ypvwy wrote
[removed]
Dankestgoldenfries t1_j3wm7gr wrote
I’m so primed for bad news that I assumed an algal bloom.