E-newsletter
Fire Fighting in Canada
Subscription Centre
MAGAZINE
Current Issue
Past Issues
News Archives
Web Exclusives
Video Archive
MARKETPLACE
Job Board
Classifieds
Firehall Bookstore
Firehall Mall
New Products
 
COMMUNITY
Blog
Events
Photo Gallery
Brigade News
 
RESOURCES
E-Newsletter
Links
Buyers Guide
Sitemap
 
Small world, small talk, big fire
July 21, 2008

It’s a small world. I know this, because over the weekend I was standing in our neighbourhood butcher shop when the woman next to me asked the butcher for the best and easiest-to-cook cut of beef. He recommended New York strip loins, and she ordered 12. I ordered two of the same from the other gentleman behind the counter, at which point the woman asked me if the steaks would be good done on the barbeque.

At this point, I noticed her X ring. Anyone from Nova Scotia (which I am) or who attended St. Frances Xavier University in Antigonish, N.S., is familiar with the gold signet ring with the X in the centre, and knows that wearing one is an invitation to talk about St. F.X., Nova Scotia, lobster, the Cabot Trail and all things we Bluenosers have in common.

I mentioned that I had just returned from Nova Scotia and was looking forward to my barbecued steak after having eaten seafood for the last couple of weeks, and I noted her X ring.

Now, here’s the small world part. She said she, too, had just returned from N.S., after visiting her family in Lake Echo, on the Eastern Shore. Her parents had been evacuated from their home during the forest fire at Porters Lake/Lake Echo in mid-June and were still reeling from the experience. Remarkably, she said, the fire came within metres of her parents’ place but the home was not damaged.

 

Interestingly, she noted that area residents were talking about the destruction caused by hurricane Juan in 2003 and all the fallen trees and debris that was still on the ground, and which may have contributed to the spread of the Porters Lake fire. I heard this from some firefighters at the Maritime Fire Chiefs Association conference this month too. And I heard more about a massive brush fire in Tantallon, N.S., that burned at the same time as the Porters Lake fire. We’ll report on both blazes in one of our fall issues.

The Canadian Press says the Porters Lake/Lake Echo fire, which forced the evacuation of 5,000 people, was the largest in an urban area in more than 30 years. Both the Porters Lake/Lake Echo fire and the Tantallon fire were believed to have been man made. 

 

 

COMMENTS

POST A COMMENT
Name:
E-mail Address:
Comment:

Captcha
Enter the code above: