There are no real safe places in a bushfire. A large body of water will certainly provide some protection, but one could not surface whilst the bushfire passed. In the Eyre Peninsula bushfires of 2005, several people jumped into the sea to escape the flames.
Underground bunkers, if airtight, would be safe, but a standard basement would not. It is best to evacuate the area.
because it is a bushfire
Chatsbury bushfire happened in 1965.
Pulletop bushfire happened on 2006-02-06.
The safest thing you can do is simply evacuate as soon as the authorities issue the warning. Prior to this, in the leadup to bushfire season, homeowners can show responsible forethought by ensuring there are no leaves in gutters or vegetation and other fuel close to the house. Have important papers and medications ready to go if you have to leave in a hurry. It is best to keep the area around one's house as clear as possible, but when a bushfire threatens, one must evacuate immediately. There is no point in stocking up on supplies.
Platypuses shelter in burrows they dig in riverbanks. They would be relatively safe in a normal bushfire, but there is a chance that they could suffer in a raging inferno, which is how intense some bushfires become.
Small plants rarely survive a bushfire.
Tell your teacher to help you
because it is a bushfire
Bushfire CRC was created in 2003.
Chatsbury bushfire happened in 1965.
In a bushfire the smoke can suffocate you
Pulletop bushfire happened on 2006-02-06.
He saw the blazing bushfire in the distance, an orange furnace of flames.
5metres
yehhh
springwood
the sky is red during a bushfire due to the fire making the smoke red.