Brigade Magazine - Spring 2021 Edition

Page 32

STATEWIDE NEWS

Recognising scarred trees Aboriginal people caused scars on trees by removing bark for various purposes. The scars, which vary in size, expose the sapwood on the trunk or branch of a tree. The bark removed was traditionally used to build canoes, coolamons, shields and shelter. As wood is susceptible to rotting, museums across Victoria house only a small number of artefacts that have been built from scarred trees. Culturally significant trees provide valuable clues about where and how Aboriginal people used to live and the use of perishable materials. They are often located near other important archaeological sites. Scarred trees provide Aboriginal people today with an important link to their culture and their past.

Characteristics of a scarred tree • The tree is usually over 150 years old and is a native species endemic to particular regions. • Species range within the localised forest type. • The scar is reasonably regular in shape, often with parallel sides and slightly pointed or rounded ends and usually stops above ground level. • The exposed sapwood at the base and occasionally at the top of the scar may show stone or steel axe marks. • The exposed sapwood is free of tree knots, branches or evidence of a branch having been at the top of the scar. • Scarred trees often have epicormic stem regrowth at the base of the scar. Some tree scars were made by other human activities. European settlers removed bark from trees to build huts. Boundary or survey markers made by settlers also caused scars. In addition, some scars are created through natural processes such as fire, lightning, storms and floods. Scars can be produced by a range of different means. If you think you’ve found a scarred tree, ask yourself these questions to eliminate other causes. • Is the scar caused by disease? • Is it caused by rubbing from other branches? • Is it caused by a limb tear, a fire or lightning? • Is it caused by wildlife such as birds or possums? • Is it caused by bulldozing or the creation of tracks? • Is it caused by European Historical Heritage, such as, slab hut construction, mining, tanning or other industries? • Is it an early boundary marker? Look for a large bolt or tag. • How thick is the regrowth around the scar? Is it old enough? Actions to take if you find a scarred tree on the fireground • Report the location to your fireground supervisor. • Establish a 50-metre ‘no machine work’ buffer either side of the tree. • Protect the tree from fire if safe to do so. • If the scarred tree is also a Clear and Present Danger tree, establish an exclusion zone. STORY KIRSTY WAUGH AND MICHAEL SHERWEN

32

PHOTO: KEITH PAKENHAM AFSM

Identification of scarred trees


Articles inside

New Disability Inclusion Guide

6min
pages 79-80

New Juniors sign up across the state

6min
pages 76-77

Through the Ages: Wangaratta Group

1min
pages 74-75

Upwey Juniors learn how to save lives

2min
page 78

Safer Together work continues to flourish

6min
pages 72-73

New station for Tatura

1min
page 71

New station at Port Fairy

4min
pages 66-67

Breathing new life into Wodonga West brigade

3min
page 65

FEATURE: How brigades have spent VESEP grants

6min
pages 62-64

FEATURE: Family support is crucial

4min
pages 52-53

Volunteer Recruitment Hub update

2min
page 57

Phillip Island station build continues

2min
pages 60-61

Wayne’s cooking legacy

2min
page 56

New equipment for road rescue crews

2min
page 51

Commendations for saving captain’s life

2min
page 55

Faces of CFA

2min
page 50

The Member Wellbeing Advisors team

3min
page 47

Eat well and stay healthy

2min
page 48

Understanding PTSD

3min
page 49

Mental Health Continuum Model

3min
page 45

Strengthening capability using diversity and inclusion

5min
pages 37-38

Structure fire case studies

17min
pages 39-44

Improving how we engage with communities

3min
page 36

The benefits of burn camps

2min
page 33

Recognising scarred trees

2min
page 32

Winners of the CFA 2021 photo competition

1min
pages 24-25

Volunteer Succession Planning Framework

2min
page 31

Donations rollout update

3min
page 30

Women’s Reference Groups

4min
pages 26-27

Remembering our fallen firefighters

3min
page 28

Understanding fire-generated weather

3min
page 29

Using tools to predict bushfire behaviour

2min
page 23

Chief Officer’s Quarterly Operational Update

12min
pages 12-15

CFA operations in a climate-challenged world

5min
pages 16-17

Incident statistics

1min
page 8

The latest news from the CEO, Chief Officer and senior leaders

12min
pages 9-11

CFA helps with NSW flood response

3min
page 7

General Firefighter training update

5min
pages 18-19

Apollo Bay double emergency

3min
page 6

Storms batter Victoria

5min
pages 4-5
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