Times Colonist

Wildfire devastatio­n viewed up close

- MICHAEL TUTTON and MICHAEL MacDONALD

HALIFAX — A wildfire that destroyed 150 homes in suburban Halifax last week was as capricious as it was destructiv­e, a fire official said Tuesday as he showed reporters two scorched subdivisio­ns.

It was the first time journalist­s had been allowed into a mandatory evacuation zone since the fire broke out on May 28 and raced through several neighbourh­oods, forcing more than 16,000 people to flee their homes. There are still 4,100 people waiting for evacuation orders to lift.

“It’s important to understand that as this wildfire moved, it threw embers up into the air, which landed hundreds of metres in front of the flames, igniting objects in yards, around homes and on back decks,” Deputy Fire Chief Dave Meldrum said.

The embers, carried aloft by strong winds on a hot, dry day, set fires in a seemingly random pattern that burned many homes to their foundation­s but left others intact, even if they were only a short distance away.

The haphazard path of the flames depended on small changes in topography and wind, Meldrum said.

On Carmel Crescent in the Highland Park neighbourh­ood, the surroundin­g woodlands have no shortage of blackened trees, but they are outnumbere­d by others thick with green foliage.

On the streets, cars were left where they burned to barely recognizab­le hulks. But in the now quiet neighbourh­ood, the sound of songbirds was everywhere.

Meldrum said the fire started about three kilometres to the west on Juneberry Lane, in the Westwood subdivisio­n. It rapidly moved east to Highland Park, where it climbed a steep hill to destroy all but a few homes on the crescent that marked the first stop on Meldrum’s tour.

“The fire moved very quickly through this neighbourh­ood and severely damaged many of the properties here,” he said. “It’s very tragic.”

To say the fire moved fast would be an understate­ment. Other fire officials have described how firefighte­rs who were among the first to arrive at the scene were repeatedly overrun by the flames and had to withdraw.

The speed with which residents left is all too apparent. In one yard, a wheelbarro­w filled with blackened plants sat in the yard of a burned residence, a shovel leaning on its side.

On Yankeetown Road, where RCMP officers were still controllin­g access, the scene was much the same. Many intact homes sat next to piles of rubble. RCMP spokesman Cpl. Guillaume Tremblay said: “It’s devastatin­g and it’s going to be heartbreak­ing for people coming back.”

At the third stop, on Bonsai Drive in Yankeetown, Meldrum pointed to a firebreak about five metres wide cut by bulldozers brought in by the provincial Department of Natural Resources. That’s where firefighte­rs stopped the flames from spreading, he said.

“Had the fire progressed beyond this point, properties in the [nearby] Pockwock Road area and into [the suburb of] Bedford [would have been] at risk,” he said. “Part of the strategy to control the fire was to bring in a large volume of heavy equipment and scrape away the soil.”

As thousands of Nova Scotians started returning to their evacuated homes this week, provincial officials warned those with wells to flush them out and get them tested. The groundwate­r could be contaminat­ed by residue from the fire, chemical fire retardants and fuel from ruptured tanks.

The Barrington Lake wildfire in southweste­rn Nova Scotia continued to burn out of control, even though the area has seen heavy rain this week.

Dave Rockwood, a spokesman for the Department of Natural Resources, said the fire had not grown since Saturday. But even though Shelburne County had received about 95 millimetre­s of rain in recent days, Rockwood said that wasn’t enough to soak the dry ground.

“I’m not confident it’s penetratin­g to cool everything down in the ground,” he said, adding fire crews were still finding numerous hot spots in wooded areas. Some mandatory evacuation orders were lifted in the Barrington and Shelburne areas, and the Roseway Hospital in the town of Shelburne was expected to reopen after it was evacuated last Wednesday.

While the provincewi­de ban on travel and activities in woodlands has ended, the ban remains in place for Shelburne County and any other evacuation areas in the province. A provincewi­de ban on outdoor fires also remains in effect.

Natural Resources Minister Tory Rushton said it will be difficult to determine the extent of damage caused by the Barrington Lake fire because of its size. At 250 square kilometres, the wildfire is the largest recorded in the province’s history.

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 ?? PHOTOS BY TIM KROCHAK, THE CANADIAN PRESS, POOL ?? A firefighte­r walks past a home destroyed by a wildfire in Hammond’s Plains, N.S., on Tuesday.
PHOTOS BY TIM KROCHAK, THE CANADIAN PRESS, POOL A firefighte­r walks past a home destroyed by a wildfire in Hammond’s Plains, N.S., on Tuesday.
 ?? ?? Left: A burned-out vehicle and the remains of a home in Hammond’s Plains. Right: A destroyed home next to an unaffected garden.
Left: A burned-out vehicle and the remains of a home in Hammond’s Plains. Right: A destroyed home next to an unaffected garden.

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