Historical information
Bushfire perimeter rather than bushfire area is the main control problem for firefighters on the ground. A conundrum rapidly compounded by spot fires.
A small 5 ha fire can be nearly 1 km around the perimeter. That's a long way to build a control line by hand in rough bush.
Dry firefighting techniques by hand were mostly confined to “knocking down” or “beating out” the flames, as well as "digging out".
Digging or raking a “mineral earth” trail down to bare dirt proved most effective in forest fuels which, unlike grass, tend to retain heat and smoulder.
Early tools were whatever happened to be close at hand. They were simple and primitive and included shovels, slashers, axes, hoes, beaters and rakes. A cut branch to beat the flames was often the only thing available.
Farming and logging tools, developed over centuries of manual labour, and readily available at local hardware stores came into use, but little thought was given to size, weight, and balance.
For years foresters experimented with combination tools.
In about 1952 fire beaters and other implements were being replaced with Rakuts.
However, its believed the now common Rakehoe is an Australian variation of the American McLeod Tool which was developed in 1905 by forest ranger Malcolm McLeod of the Sierra National Forest.
The late Athol Hodgson advised that predecessors, Reg Torbet who had been the Chief Fire Officer for the Forests Commission from 1948-1956, along with his QLD counterpart Clive Price, went in late 1951 as Australian delegates on a 10 week fire study tour of Nth America organised by the United Nations. They came back with a couple of McLeod tools from Canada. Cam MacLeod (different spelling) had been the Head of Fire Research for the Canadian Forest Service at the time and had supplied them. The tools were ideal for deciduous forests in the eastern provinces and Clive arranged to have them manufactured in QLD.
The Rakho, as it was then spelled, was first issued to FCV crews 65 years ago in 1955-56.
The American Pulaski had been trialled, but never found favour with Australian firefighters.
Significance
First used in 1955
Physical description
Rakehoe