Catastrophic bushfires in eastern Australia have killed at least three people and forced thousands from their homes, with the death toll expected to rise as firefighters struggle towards hard-to-reach communities.
In the normally picturesque coastal town of Forster - one among dozens hit along the eastern seaboard - vast plumes of smoke shot out from multiple blazes as water bombers swooped in overhead.
And in Bobin, around 60km north of Forster, the whole town was scorched with some fires soaring 30ft along the tree canopy.
Some homes were completely burned to the ground in the small rural town, and in one just a fireplace could be seen among the smouldering rubble.
2 people dead, dozens of homes destroyed in Australian bushfires. Crews are tackling more than 90 fires. https://t.co/3jxXCwGw1g
— CBC News Alerts (@CBCAlerts) November 9, 2019
Prime Minister Scott Morrison said that, if needed, the military could be called on to help some 1,300 firefighters who are tackling around 100 separate blazes.
Several people are still unaccounted for and 30 more have been injured - mostly firefighters working for hours on end in smoky, smouldering scrubland and blazing forests of towering eucalyptus.
"My only thoughts today are with those who have lost their lives and their families," Morrison said, as hundreds of civilians also volunteered to help their hard-hit neighbours.
A body was found in a burnt-out building near the east-coast town of Taree, police said, while another victim was found in a car and a woman died despite medics trying for several hours to save her.
As hot and windy weather eased slightly on Saturday, the number of most serious fires fell to just a handful from an unprecedented 17 on Friday.
Our fire & emergency services in both states are responding with great courage & professionalism. And the country is coming to their aid. Here you can see more SA volunteers heading off from RAAF Edinburgh to Port Macquarie to help fight the devastating bushfires in NSW. pic.twitter.com/upE4splBwn
— Scott Morrison (@ScottMorrisonMP) November 8, 2019
But within an area spanning almost 1,000km, schools were burned and at least 150 homes were destroyed, while authorities were forced to evacuate detention centres and old people's homes.
It was a narrow escape for Don Russell, with the fire coming within meters of his home in Taree.
"They've done a top job, them fellas," Russell told AFP after a crew of six firefighters brought the blaze under control.
His next-door neighbours were not so lucky, however - their home went up in flames Saturday afternoon. No one was home.
‘We’ve never seen this many fires concurrently at emergency alert level.’ — This POV footage shows what firefighters see as they fight Australia’s historic wildfires pic.twitter.com/yPkRQp9UDc
— NowThis (@nowthisnews) November 8, 2019
"It used to be God's country, but it ain't any more," said another neighbour, 72-year-old Dave Scott.
New South Wales's rural fire service said an emergency warning was in place for four fires among the dozens raging across the state.