QRIDA helps graziers rise from the ashes following SQ bushfires
More than a year on from the 2023 bushfires, Barry and Donna Aitken bravely recount the damage they found once the smoke cleared and share how they’re rebuilding their cattle operation and preparing for the possibility of future disasters.
Barry and Donna Aitken
During a week they’ll never forget, an orange haze blanketing neighbouring properties swept closer to Barry and Donna Aitken’s cattle station, but the extent of the bushfire threat wasn’t clear until a different flurry of orange showed up on their door.
“When the Rural Fire Brigade started convening here on my patio (and had all their laptops out and were radioing), I thought it must be bad up the back of the property in the Cararvon Ranges,” Donna said.
The 2023 Northern and Southern Queensland bushfires burned across more than 750,000 hectares from the Cook Shire to the Southern Downs, impacting agricultural operations like Barry and Dona Aitken’s cattle station ‘Boxvale’ on the Upper Dawson.
“We just hoped it would burn itself out, but it just wasn’t going to do that. There was too much fuel … I think it’d been three years since the previous fire, and we’d had a lot of rain in those three years,” Barry said.
“We hadn’t burnt any country at all in the two or three years prior to that.”
Once firefighters contained the blaze, the Aitkens surveyed the damage, anxious to find out the impact to their livestock and infrastructure.
“We found some dead cows, and then we ran into the problem of cows in areas where there was nothing to eat at all,” Barry said.
“The difficulty is a lot of those areas you can’t get to. There was probably 20 kilometres from the nearest road in a lot of places where the cattle were.
“The fence that was burnt was really burnt completely and probably 80 per cent of the timber posts were burnt.”
The Aitkens accessed an Extraordinary Disaster Assistance Recovery Grant and Disaster Assistance Loan from the Queensland Rural and Industry Development Authority (QRIDA) to purchase hay, rebuild their herd and replace damaged fencing.
“We were calling our QRIDA representative about another matter we already had with QRIDA, and we were telling her about our predicament,” Donna said.
“She asked us if we knew there was assistance available from QRIDA, which we didn’t, so she was really helpful and told us how to apply, what the criteria were and sent us all the forms.”
Donna said QRIDA’s disaster financial assistance application processes were easy to navigate.
“When we were applying, we took photos of the burnt-out fences and burnt-out posts and where the fence had all fallen down,” Donna said.
“We’ve had nothing but support from QRIDA, like 110% support.”
Over a year on from the bushfires, lush greenery has reemerged at Boxvale with improved weather conditions as Barry and Donna now focus on rebuilding their herd.
“We’re lucky, we’ve had rain early this year,” Barry said.
“We’ve increased our cows such a lot and we did that by reducing our sales earlier in the year, so we’ve got a lot more breeding females that were retained.”
The Aitkens have also employed more stock people to help at the station.
“We have put on a fabulous young couple who we are training up, and Barry loves to mentor people so he’s loving that, and they’re sucking it up like a sponge,” Donna said.
This time around, Barry and Donna are feeling much more prepared for what the disaster season may bring, after carrying out climate resilience activities at their property.
“Just by having a little more manpower, we were able to grade and clear our tracks right around our property and internal roads that we were never able to do,” Barry said.
“It’s not the first fire we’ve had, and it won’t be the last.
“We had a huge expense losing cows and losing infrastructure, so it’s whether you spend your money beforehand and benefit out the other side.”
For more information about the disaster financial assistance currently available from QRIDA, visit QRIDA's disaster webpage or call 1800 623 946.
QRIDA administers financial assistance to disaster affected primary producers, businesses, and non-profit organisations under the jointly funded Commonwealth-State Disaster Recovery Funding Arrangements (DRFA).