For the second time in the past seven years, Danny Osborne has fled his home because of a wildfire.
In May 2016, he escaped the devastating fires in Fort McMurray, Alta., which forced the evacuation of 90,000 people and destroyed 2,400 homes and businesses. And his Alberta home survived the disaster.
“It’s gone,” the 45-year-old construction worker said after he returned from seeing what was left of his home. “It is completely flattened.”
Osborne recalled how when he left his house after an evacuation was ordered, he saw black, churning smoke in his rear-view mirror and felt the same “gut-wrenching” emotions he endured during the Alberta disaster.
“It’s just chaos, and it’s happening all over the country,” said the father of two, his voice flat and fatigued. “This time, I think I was a little calmer as I’ve been through it before. But it was still very, very scary. It’s the second time I’ve pulled my camper away from a forest fire to live in it.”
Fire officials said that with the return of dry, windy conditions on Tuesday, there could have been a dangerous “reburn” caused by a change in wind direction over the evacuated subdivisions, which are spread out over 100 square kilometres.
“The fire didn’t get bigger,” he told a late-day news conference at a command post in Upper Tantallon. “However, the fire is not out, and the fire can wake up and gain new energy.”
Earlier in the day, Premier Tim Houston announced the province would be banning all travel and activity in all wooded areas as of 4 p.m. local time.
“For God’s sake, stop burning. Stop flicking your cigarette butts out your car windows. Just stop it,” Houston said, adding that conservation officers caught six people setting illegal fires on Monday night alone.
The ban applies to all forestry, mining, hunting, fishing, hiking, camping, off-road vehicle use and all commercial activity on Crown lands, he said.
“We’re in a very serious situation in this province, and we need to take the steps that we can to protect Nova Scotia,” Houston told a news conference via a video call from Shelburne, N.S., where the largest wildfire in the province has been burning since the weekend.
“I wanted to get a sense of the damage here,” the premier said. “It’s extensive. It’s heartbreaking.”
Scott Tingley, manager of forest protection with Nova Scotia’s Department of Natural Resources, said the blaze near Barrington was proving to be very challenging. “We do have communities and homes at risk as we speak,” he said.
Trees and other flammable materials in the affected subdivisions have been “cured” by extreme heat, which means they will readily ignite if the fire returns, said David Steeves, a forest resources technician with Nova Scotia’s Department of Natural Resources.
“The possibility of reburn ... could create a very dangerous environment,” he said. “That’s why it’s so important for folks to respect the evacuation zones and stay out.”
With the extended forecast calling for hot, windy weather on Wednesday and Thursday, and no rain until Friday night at the earliest, the risk of a reburn remains.
Meanwhile, as thousands of residents wait to learn the fate of their evacuated houses, questions are being raised about the response of firefighters and their access to fire hydrants in the sprawling subdivisions.
Meldrum said the fire on Sunday was moving so quickly that firefighters didn’t have time to worry about hydrants.
“Keeping up with the fire during Sunday’s events was more about the speed of the fire and our ability to get resources on the flanks of that fire and less about the availability of water,” he said.
Fire officials were also asked Tuesday about the inherent dangers in building massive subdivisions that have limited road access and remain exposed to large wooded areas, something Meldrum referred to as the “wildland-urban interface.”
“As we build deeper into what used to be forested land, consideration must be made for (installing) lots of places for firefighters to get water, (and building) many routes in and out of communities,” he said.
The report said the fire department confirmed there was a project in the works to install so-called dry fire hydrants in these subdivisions. These hydrants are not connected to the pressurized municipal water supply but are instead linked to a water source, such as a lake, which requires a pumper truck to extract the water.