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CORRECTED-Farming family faces bleak future after deadly Australian bushfires

Published 01/15/2020, 02:15 PM
Updated 01/15/2020, 02:16 PM
CORRECTED-Farming family faces bleak future after deadly Australian bushfires

(Corrects headline and first paragraph that one brother is a
cattle farmer. Note strong language in paragraph 3.)
By Martin Petty
WANDELLA, Australia, Jan 15 (Reuters) - There is little that
Australia's deadly bushfires didn't take from dairy and cattle
farmers Tim and Warren Stalway.
For nearly two days over New Year the brothers battled
fierce blazes that tore through the family's farms, the flames
igniting on multiple fronts and wiping out almost everything in
their path.
The pair's father, Robert, and brother, Patrick, died trying
to defend their properties. All the family farms were burned to
ashes and debris, and hundreds of cattle killed.
"I keep saying to myself that it's not that bad, but it is
that bad. It's fucking terrible," said Tim Stalway, 42, shaking
his head in disbelief at he looked at his burnt out dairy farm
near the town of Cobargo in New South Wales state.
Warren Stalway fought back tears as he described his
anguish at discovering his brother and father had died, and how
other farmers donated their hay to keep his farm going.
"People have just turned up, they all want to help," he
said.
The scale of the recovery facing the two fifth-generation
farmers is huge. Destroyed machinery, felled trees and blackened
farmland were surrounded by miles of damaged fencing on Tim
Salway's farm. Metal tanks were melted and hay and cattle sheds
worth tens of thousands of dollars were flattened.
Salway lost 170 cows, including one that was so badly burned
that it had to be shot.
"They're the only heifers I've got left," he said, pointing
to 30 cows gathering curiously, the sky behind them blanketed by
haze from fires still burning on the other side of the valley.
"I've got no heifers for the next three years, they all got
wiped in the fire. Just in cattle, if I look to replace them
you're looking at A$300,000 ($207,000)."
Monster bushfires have razed bushland equivalent to the size
of Bulgaria since the start of October, killing 28 people,
destroying more than 2,500 homes and killing millions of
animals.
"The noise of it was like jumbo jets ... It snapped trees in
half," Tim Stalway said of the fires that destroyed much of the
Cobargo farms. "I watched the flames get sucked down the hill,
there was a boom, an almighty thump. It was my dad and my
brother. It's like a bomb's gone off."
Warren Salway's wife Helen, who has cancer, took refuge in a
nearby town while he raced through smoke-filled lanes to get
back to his cattle farm, twice running his truck off the road.

"ANNIHILATED"
The bushfires crisis deals a further blow to farmers already
struggling following a three-year drought, which has been
credited with fuelling the fires.
"It's just annihilated us," said Warren Salway. "It's just
numbness."
Salway spent more than a day using a bulldozer and excavator
to bury 145 cows and 80 sheep. Many of the cows he found alive
had to be shot due to their burns.
"Years and years of breeding and you see them laying in a
heap just dead," he said. "That's what you live for, your
animals."
Tony Allen, a former local mayor whose own farm had a lucky
escape, said the crisis was a wake-up call for policy makers to
support an industry already doing it tough.
"The decision is do you want to keep an industry going, do
you want to feed Australians with Australian food, or do you
want to let the industry just evaporate and live off imported
product?" he said.
Tim Salway said quitting was not on his mind, but he doubted
the family business would survive into a sixth generation.
"I've got four kids and unless it improves, none of them
will be taking this over," he said. "Why do you want to do that
to them?"

($1 = 1.4497 Australian dollars)

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