Also remember last time there were fires like this tracks were left closed LONG after the seasonal...
So if your travelling late this yr, maybe rethink is in order..
----------------------------------------------
CFA battles 81 fires
Dan Harrison
October 4, 2006 - 2:42PM
More than 80 fires have broken out across Victoria on the first total fire ban day of the season.
Today's total fire ban in the north-west of the state, including the towns of
Bendigo,
Mildura,
Castlemaine,
Swan Hill,
Stawell and Horsham, is the earliest total fire ban in Victorian history.
Despite the ban, Country Fire Authority crews have battled 81 fires across the state, including blazes in Pakenham, Hallam, Rowville, Badger
Creek and Mount Macedon.
A CFA spokeswoman said none of the fires were serious and no property had been lost.
Today's historic ban was prompted by a weather forecast which included high winds, low humidity and temperatures as high as 30 degrees.
In the area covered by the ban, which takes up about a quarter of the state, fires are prohibited in the open air until midnight.
Before today, the earliest date in the dry season on which a total fire ban had been declared was October 9, 1981.
CFA deputy chief officer Graham Fountain said yesterday it was now clear that Victoria's traditional summertime bushfire season was coming weeks early, and he warned households in high risk areas to prepare for a "long, hot, dry summer".
"The summer fire season is here and we need to do our best to be prepared and modify our behaviour accordingly," he said.
The Bureau of Meteorology has also predicted Victoria is facing an 80 per cent chance of a hotter and drier than average spring in addition to below-average winter rainfall and
Melbourne's warmest September ever.
But with lower temperatures and showers forecast for tomorrow, it was unlikely another total fire ban would be declared tomorrow, the CFA spokeswoman said.
theage.com.au, with AAP