Peregian Beach bushfire victim Pam Murphy taken in by neighbours after blaze destroys home
When the home of Pam Murphy burnt to the ground in the Peregian Beach bushfire two neighbours didn’t hesitate to help.
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WHEN the home of 90-year-old Pam Murphy burnt to the ground in the Peregian Beach bushfire two neighbours didn’t hesitate to help.
On the night of September 9 a wall of flame roared towards the seaside hamlet on the Sunshine Coast
Fierce winds stoked an unprecedented ember storm, sparking spotfires hundreds of metres from the fire front.
Photos capture devastation of Peregian Beach fires in Queensland
Hundreds of residents were evacuated as a 70 metre high wall of flames raced towards residential areas.
But after a miraculous battle waged by firefighters all homes were spared, except for Pam’s.
Forty years of memories, artefacts and belongings were taken by the inferno in minutes.
But the fire couldn’t destroy community spirit.
Nearby neighbours Lester and Jackie Harding were there from the start – keeping Pam company at the evacuation centre, pulling surviving artwork from her the ruins of her home and even opening up their own home.
Pam said she was eternally grateful for their kindness.
“I’m very lucky to have Lester and Jackie Harding,” she told The Courier-Mail.
“Ever since the fire I’ve been here.”
From across the road she can watch on as builders resurrect her home and keep an eye on her traumatised cat.
Ask the Hardings about their gesture for compassion and they’re humble to a fault.
“It was just one of those things that’s the right thing to do at the time,” Lester said.
“If somebody else’s house had burnt down, we’d have down the same thing.”
Lester said it was the least he could do for a neighbour who he’d spoken to every other day for the last 10 years.
“I feel what we’ve done is very little compared to people who don’t even know her who have contributed kindness,” he said.
“Pam’s had an enormous quantity of people dropping things off.”
Pam has taken the loss of her home in her stride but admits it can be hard to adjust.
One bittersweet development has been her Burmese cat Daisy.
Pam thought she’d lost the feline in the blaze.
But weeks later she emerged alive.
“She won’t come near me, but she’s alive,” Pam said.
“I feed her every night, she’s eating, she looks very well but she is so traumatised.
“We are hoping when the house is built she’ll come back.”
Originally published as Peregian Beach bushfire victim Pam Murphy taken in by neighbours after blaze destroys home