Rescued koalas on the road to recovery
Traumatised and injured koalas rescued from the Mallacoota fires are taking their first tentative steps in their new home on Phillip Island.
Traumatised and injured koalas rescued from the Mallacoota fires are taking their first tentative steps in their new home on Phillip Island.
From extreme water sports to a kid-friendly beach and a decent feed at the pub, Metung wasn’t hit by fire but it was evacuated three times. Now locals are luring tourists back.
Spoil your partner by booking a weekend of love at the picturesque Paynesville in East Gippsland, and you’ll also be supporting communities recovering from bushfires.
It’s one of the most iconic trophies in sport and was won in dramatic fashion. Now owners of the 1992 Cox Plate have pledged the award to raise money for bushfire recovery.
Volunteer firefighters are battling blazes with face masks that don’t protect them from dangerous and potentially cancer-causing fumes — and a charity is trying to fix the problem.
As Australia begins to assess the bushfires’ devastating impact on native wildlife, there are fears for Queensland’s declining koala population.
As a vet, it’s the sad reality of my job to deal with animals in pain. But what I saw on Kangaroo Island will always stay with me, writes Dr Garnett Hall.
Australia’s veterinarians have been hit both financially and emotionally by our horror bushfire season. But help is on its way.
Heroic, heartbreaking and simply harrowing … This is the complete and definitive collection of now iconic images from the Australian bushfire crisis. Warning: Graphic Images
When the home of Pam Murphy burnt to the ground in the Peregian Beach bushfire two neighbours didn’t hesitate to help.
The state’s fierce bushfire season has claimed the lives of five men, many of whom had spent decades fighting ferocious fires around the state.
At News Corp, we are committed to helping communities rebuild after the bushfires, and today’s special editions will add to the millions we are putting towards recovery, writes Michael Miller.
To see the devastation a bushfire can cause in just a few hellish days is always a shock, but to see what survives can also surprise. If it is a miracle that most of Mallacoota is still standing, it’s a privilege to see the people there tackle adversity, writes Andrew Rule.
More than 100 businesses and well-known Aussies have come together to show their support for Victoria’s fire-ravaged regions by pledging to take their teams and networks to the towns. SEE THE LIST
Original URL: https://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/bushfiresupport/page/10