Legume and cereal farmer Simon Nuske lost up to 70 per cent of his land in the Dimboola fire but still considers himself lucky.
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"Very lucky to be quite honest, it could have been a lot worse, it came in hot and fast," he told AAP.
The father of two stayed to defend his property while his young family evacuated, with their flock of 500 sheep, crops and machinery largely spared.
He's turning his mind to the big clean up and fixing his fences, but says the total cost of recovery is anyone's guess.
"It could take a couple years, just to sort of get everything back to where it was," he said.
"Just to get the paddocks back in shape it's going to take two good years to get cover back on crops."
The small country town near the South Australian border is largely breathing a sigh of relief after an intense bushfire sparked by dry lightning flared to almost 70,000 hectares in just 24 hours.
There are two other out-of-control bushfires at either end of the blaze-ravaged Grampians National Park, with fears they could merge and burn for weeks as crews grapple with the rugged terrain.
Residents and holidaymakers holidaying in the park's southwest at Glenisla, Mooralla, Strachans, Victoria Valley, Woohlpooer have been urged to leave.
Farmer Simon Nuske stayed to fight the fire as his family left their property in western Victoria. (Diego Fedele/AAP PHOTOS)
The fire has grown to 4500 hectares, with isolated properties and camp grounds under threat.
Further north, a collection of smaller fires, ranging from 150ha to 300ha, are burning in the Wallaby Rocks area near Zumsteins.
Firefighters are working on protecting private farmland next to the park ahead of forecast warmer, windier weather later in the week.
There is still plenty of work left for firefighters on the Dimboola fire, with the blaze so intense CFA First Lieutenant Wayne 'Berger' Hartwich says it's the worst he's ever encountered.
He and many other volunteers can count the number of hours sleep they've had in the past three days on just one hand.
"In my 35 years it's probably the most difficult I ever had, and that includes Black Saturday," he said.
The outskirts of Dimboola are still hazy with smoke and littered with smouldering trees. (Diego Fedele/AAP PHOTOS)
One home close to the town was destroyed, as well as another home and conference centre used for weddings.
The fire is not yet controlled but has been downgraded to watch and act with locals allowed to go home.
The outskirts of the farming community is still hazy with smoke and littered with smouldering trees across vast patches of burnt paddocks and bush.
Mr Hartwich also says the town was very lucky, attributing the successful defence to chance and good fire management.
"It was all dangerous, still dangerous now with tree hazards issues like that, it's been huge," he said.
Some 10,000-odd lightning strikes hit the ground in Victoria on Monday, with crews on alert for other blazes that could flare.
The local unit expects to be busy for several weeks and is bracing for hotter temperatures, hoping the wind doesn't pick up.
"As soon as we got winds, we've got issues," Mr Hartwich said.
"So at this stage, I think the heat we can handle, as long as we've got the ground crews.
Residents turn their minds to recovery while firefighters continue to battle the blazes. (Diego Fedele/AAP PHOTOS)
Cattle owner Quentin Barrett lost three animals when flames jumped across a river at the back of his brother's property and tore through fences.
"We thought we're good, we thought it might miss us, but then the wind just changed and everything just ran," he said.
"One fence line could cost upwards of $10,000 to $20,000 for a stretch, and there's three of those," he said.
"We unfortunately weren't insured."
As fire fighters continue their exhausting work, they are greeted past a giant sign reading "thank you fireys".
Dimboola resident Bree Myers and seven-year-old daughter Indie Francis hung it outside the moment they returned.
"We were just really worried, seriously worried, that we'd come back to nothing," Ms Myers said.
"It's the least we could do, just so they know that we appreciate it."
Australian Associated Press