Currently I do the following.
- Review the fire authority and parks website to see if any fires are in the area.
- Check the fire danger rating. (for nsw) https://www.rfs.nsw.gov.au/fire-informa ... and-tobans If danger is extreme or catastrophic I won’t go. With severe danger rating I will strongly consider not going.
- Review the Bureau of meteorology site for the weather forecast. Generally, if its going to be windy (above 30km/h) and a hot day (above 30C) I’ll seriously consider not going on the walk.
- I definitely wont go if there is fire/s in the general vicinity and high winds/ temps or if its a calm day but there is a fire in the immediate area
However now fires are regularly occurring in the cooler months. The risk is increasing that I will find myself in a situation where my conditions for a relatively low risk fire day have been meet and I elect to go on the walk but still encounter a fire regardless.
I found myself with a decision to make a few weeks ago while walking federal pass in the blue mountains.
It was a cool day 10-14 degrees with 15-25km winds and the occasional stronger gust. I was taking a friend on their first bushwalk and we were walking from Leura to Katoomba. After descending Leura cascades and about to embark on a further decent I saw the following small fire across the valley at the base of mount solitary.
The wind was blowing in my face and from the direction of the fire. My first thought was to abandon the walk as it was an easy 15 min climb back to Leura. I tried to check the fire service active fire map however was too low in valley to pick up a data signal. I recalled seeing a 4wd fire service command vehicle at the Leura cascades car park but It was parked and unoccupied.
As the track ascended again a bit further, I pressed on and was able to get data and check the fire map. Sure, enough there was an indicator for Mt solitary hazard reduction and a further marker for out of control bushfire immediately next to it. Both were marked as 0 hectares in size. So I concluded that the fire service had decided to undertake a minor haz reduction in the already burnt area and it had sparked up or perhaps a dormant heat spot from the major solitary haz reduction 2 months ago had flared up.
I then reviewed the weather bureau site and it said the winds were southerly.

So based on these observations I decided to continue on.
Still undecided if I pushed it from a risk management perspective. Even though the fire was small, didn’t move or get any bigger and we concluded the walk safely.
Interested in forum members experiences and thoughts on what to do if this situation occurs?
If you see a fire/smoke do you immediately abandon the walk?
Or do you consider the temp/wind direction/fire size etc?
Do you only decide to continue on if there are easy evacuation routes available?
Other criteria?
Thought it might be interesting to discuss as seems the rule book is being thrown out a bit with fires occuring in the cooler months.
EDIT. Obviously im talking about a situation where you see a small amount of smoke. If there is significant fire/smoke then Im heading to safer ground immediately. That will be a river/lake or other low lying area clear of fuel. Not uphill unless im very very close to a evac point eg carpark. Fire travels much faster uphill and heat goes upward. Sad tale but valuable lesson of schoolboys who encountered bushfire in the Grose Valley many years ago. The ones who ran down to the river survived, the others who ran uphill for the 'safety' of the Perrys Lookdown carpark/road perished. https://www.rfs.nsw.gov.au/about-us/our ... r-50-years
I do wonder if a canyon would be a safe shelter? would a fire roar up into a canyon like a funnel?