The Growing Menace of Trees 

By Viv Forbes

Australia is threatened by dangerous trees. They have infested our cities, menaced our power lines, invaded our grasslands and fuelled our worst bushfires.

The meander by Cyclone Alfred through south east Queensland illustrated how bad this danger has become.

Big tall trees smashed power lines and over 450,000 people lost their power, some for days; big tall trees crushed cars and closed roads; and in every cyclone big tall trees fall on houses, shops and fences.

2019 Cyclone Kenneth, in Mozambique. Image Credit: Sky News

Far too many of these trees damaged other people’s property; and far too often the owners of the trees will not foot the repair bills. People who harbour big tall trees should be held responsible for damage they do to neighbours or to public property. It needs a couple of claims for damages to focus minds.

And if some greenie with government power prevents a landowner from pruning an unsafe tree, that green bureaucrat should pay for all damages done by that feral tree.

To avoid damages claims, big tall trees should be lopped to a height that does not endanger other people’s property.

Trees are also causing rural damage.

Our grasslands and open forests were once kept open and grassy by regular burning, first by aboriginals and later by graziers. Early explorers and colonists marvelled at those lovely grassy plains with their abundant birds and marsupials.

Aboriginal burning was not a planned procedure – it was a result of their lifestyle. Fire was one of their greatest tools, used for warmth and cooking, for creating fresh new grass for marsupials which they hunted for food, for discouraging mosquitos and sand-flies and for inter-tribal wars.

But starting a fire from scratch was tiresome and time consuming (they did not have a box of wax vestas in their dilly bag.) So when the tribe travelled in search of food, one of the lubras was charged with the duty of keeping a flame alive. She carried a burning stick. When her fire-stick threatened to go out, she shoved it into a tussock of dry grass to rejuvenate its flames. Then she moved on, leaving the tussock burning. So lots of patches of grass were burnt, encouraging new growth, and attracting grazing marsupials whose protein was a valued aboriginal food.

Abel Tasman, along with other early mariners, mentioned the columns of smoke he saw in his voyages around Australia in the 1600’s and 1700’s.

Captain Cook noticed the smoke from many fires as he sailed up the East Coast of aboriginal Australia in 1770 – he even named “Smokey Cape” in NSW. He noted that the whole place seemed to be burning.

This widespread burning by aboriginals discouraged trees and created the great treeless grasslands and open forests that existed when Europeans came. There are many places in Australia with names like “One Tree Hill”, or “Bald Knob” or “Nissans Flat” – all created by regular grass fires that prevented the establishment of eucalypt scrub.

My wife’s family, the Bells, and their relatives the Athertons, were the first European settlers in North Queensland. I have looked at the site of the first Bell property which they named “Sarina”. I was amazed that it looked like rubbishy scrub – not the open grassland I was expecting. I asked one of our oldest living relatives, George Bell, why they settled on that unpromising looking land. He said “I have wondered that, but on reading the old diaries I found that it was a beautiful open grassy plain when they settled. As aboriginal grass fires diminished, the scrubby eucalypts invaded and the family moved to better grassland further from the coast.

Luckily the early graziers also soon learned to use cool season burning to remove worthless dry grass and replace it by new green shoots as soon as the summer storms brought rain. They also collected dead branches and fallen trees for firewood, yard rails and posts.

However our grasslands and open forests are now being destroyed by ignorant green busybodies who prevent or delay burning and insist that dead wood is allowed to accumulate on the ground. There are fewer fires, but when they come they are unstoppable.

And there are too many “protected” parks and forests where grazing, hunting and collecting firewood is banned. These areas have become havens for weeds like lantana, groundsel, wait-a-while and prickly pear, and pests like wild cats, wild dogs, wild deer and wild pigs.

People all over the world have admired our beautiful eucalypt trees and too many have planted them in their own backyards. Gum tree seeds were sent to Kew Gardens in UK in 1774 and were soon also being propagated in places like Spain, Portugal, Italy, Morocco, California and South Africa. In Spain they were promoted for pulp production: “a fast- growing tree species producing abundant pulp in comparison with slow-growing oaks”.

But eucalypts pose a special fire danger – the beauty of “Blue Hills” arises when eucalyptus oils evaporate from the leaves of gum trees in hot sunshine. This volatile vapour and fine dust in the air above the trees scatter the light, producing the blue haze. But eucalyptus oil is highly flammable. Should lightning, arsonists or careless campers start a bushfire near a eucalypt forest on a hot afternoon, this flammable vapour will assist the fire to race through the tree tops.

David Bowman, a forest ecologist at the University of Tasmania in Australia, had this to say about eucalypts:

“Looking at the eucalyptus forest outside my window in Tasmania, I see a gigantic fire hazard. On a really hot day, those things are going to burn like torches and shower our suburbs with sparks.”

Once upon a time Australian landowners were obliged to keep their land free of eucalypt regrowth (it was a condition of their leases). Inspectors checked on them to ensure they were had cleared the land and were controlling suckers.

Now landowners are the suckers – if woody weeds reach a certain size, they become protected native plants. Bureaucratic spies now use satellite data to catch landowners in illegal clearing. Soon the remaining grass is smothered and the land turns to worthless scrub harbouring weeds and animal pests.

And a haven for fierce bushfires.

Further Reading

Wildfires – Climate or Criminal?
https://saltbushclub.com/2025/01/10/wildfires-climate-or-criminal/

Man-made Mega fires [PDF]: https://saltbushclub.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/man-made-megafires-letter-to-pm.pdf

Canadian Government Planting Twelve Million Trees:
https://www.canada.ca/en/natural-resources-canada/news/2025/03/12-million-new-trees-to-be-planted-on-tcho-lands.html

Los Angeles burns in Winter:
https://joannenova.com.au/2025/01/los-angeles-burns-in-winter/

Joe Rogan’s chilling LA wildfire prediction resurfaces:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ONwjYOrCBV0

Save the Forests:
https://saltbushclub.com/2021/07/16/save-the-forests/

The Fire with Nine Lives [PDF]:
http://saltbushclub.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/09/the-fire-with-nine-lives.pdf

Greens oppose prescribed burning:
https://saltbushclub.com/2024/11/01/the-aunt-dolly-bushfire-system-is-doomed-to-fail/

Highly inflammable eucalypts a danger in Spain: volunteers ringbarking them:
https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2021/8/23/spanish-volunteers-remove-eucalyptus-in-bid-to-prevent-wildfires

Eucalypts and wildfires in Portugal, Greece, California and Hawaii:
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2023-09-09/wildfires-portugal-greece-california-hawaii-euclyptus-trees/102760264

The dangers of “Gasoline Trees”:
https://www.livescience.com/40583-australia-wildfires-eucalyptus-trees-bushfires.html

“Firestick Ecology – fair dinkum science in plain English” by Vic Jurskis: 2015 Connor Court Publishing ISBN 978-1-925138-74-0
https://www.connorcourtpublishing.com.au/Firestick-Ecology-Fairdinkum-Science-in-Plain-English_p_41.html

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