All too frequently, burn-offs became uncontrollable conflagrations that swept through thousands of hectares, destroying cattle, fences, homes and livelihoods, and burning mills and much-needed timber. Townsfolk, blanketed in dense, acrid smoke needed lights at midday; ships, unable to pick up landmarks, sat marrooned in harbour - yet the burning, as in other frontier societies, remained unabated and largely unquestioned.
It is against that background that Helen Beaglehole sets the fascinating and previously unexplored history of how settlers' random and careless burning led, in 1921, to legislation that still underpins New Zealand's official policy on wildfire. She explores the huge public education campaign that sought to convince all sectors of the public that mindless burning had to be retrained, and traces how increasingly sophisticated fire-fighting technologies, coupled with developing knowledge of weather and fire behaviour, were used to prevent, contain and extinguish fire. Finally she looks at the early Forest Service employees who in effect became the nation's first rural firefighters, their skills honed in the vast controlled burns of the 1960s, '70s and '80s, and describes the regime established after the Service's demise and the issues faced today.
Helen Beaglehole established herself as a writer with stories and novels for children and young adults published in New Zealand and abroad. More recently, she has turned to non-fiction, which she writes from a strong research base with an engaging style and a good sense of narrative. Her eye for the telling detail informs a capacity to paint with a broad brush.
Fire in the Hills is a worthy successor to Lighting the Coast: A history of New Zealand's coastal lighthouse system (CUP, 2006) and Always the Sound of the Sea: The daily lives of New Zealand's lighthouse keepers (Craig Potton, 2009).
You can listen to Helen Beaglehole being interviewed about Fire in the Hills on Radio NZ’s Afternoons with Jim Mora, here.