The rain and winds yesterday pushed all the smoke away, so while we watched and waited with some trepidation, it was actually a lovely day here yesterday. Except for the dratted sirens and helicopters. There should be a law against them (Just kidding)
Today is looking even better. It is currently 13 with only light winds though they should pick up as the day gets going. All our local fires are still burning, but behind containment lines, so should remain safe until we get high temps and strong winds again. What we really need is a good downpour.
After yesterday, we are seriously considering doubling or tripling our on property water supply. And upgrading our pumps. We currently have three. One feeds the house, one petrol driven dedicated fire pump - it empties the tank at an alarming rate - and a third whose main duty is to fill our main tank (7,000L) from our backup tank (3,000L) I tried using the latter to drive the ember defence sprinklers on the roof yesterday. Not a chance, so they remain reliant on town water pressure.
Current plan is to add a 10,000L tank beside the 7,000 one and close couple them. This will increase our house water supply as well as supplying extra for fire fighting at need. By putting a valve between the two tanks we will be able to separate them at need. Then another 10,000 to capture the remaining unharvested third of the roof. We don't have that harvested
ATM as we use the current tanks for our water supply, and that part has the chimney on it . this leads to a risk of water contamination. But if we dedicate that part to fire use, we don't need to worry about the contamination.
The problem with doing this is that it costs money we don't have Around $5,000 for the tanks. More for the plumbing - the sprinkler heads we are using are about $100 each. More for extra pumps. They come at around $1K each. Hopefully we'll get there by mid winter so we will be in a better position next fire season.