Mister teddy all i want to say is you fight the fire you have, not the one you may get...
One the worst days that fires can occur aircraft are often grounded and become useless,
so they used them why they could, what ever happened to a fire being fought by fire trucks and ground crew, you have all become too dependent on the aircraft, one day
there will be too many fires and what will you all do, say this is too big for us and
go home. pull your heads in.
Ahhhh soooo Big Bronto...
You arguing that the Pt Lincoln people were being too dependant upon the extra
aircraft & should have stuck to their appliances....
That's a brave call !!!
"fight the fire you have, not the one you might get" is only true if you are
on a local fireground, & even then not fully. From BFF1, remember the word
"Exposures"...
Goes hand-in-hand with the word "Risk".
The further up the food-chain, the wider & larger the risks. And exposures.
Doubtless SARC consulted their risk matrix & decided the near-certainty of
catastrophe by not redeploying, outweighed the mere possibility of Bad Things
happening if they did. Tough call, but probably the right one on the day.
At least in the Hills, with all brigades on active stand-by, there are enough
appliances around to give us a fair chance of whacking out-breaks while they
are small.
Irrespective of aircraft redeployments, we were all very lucky last Tuesday.
cheers