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Smoke, fire and coincidence
Feb. 6, 2009

You may have read in this week’s newspapers about firefighters in
Baddeck, N.S., who rescued the driver and five passengers from an Acadian Lines bus that left the Trans-Canada Highway and plunged into the icy Baddeck River.

I didn’t see this tidbit in the news stories, but sources in N.S. have said that all 20 volunteer firefighters in Baddeck – a beautiful town on the other side of the Bras d’Or Lakes from my family’s perch in Ben Eoin – were meeting at the fire hall and got to the scene within minutes of being paged out. By all accounts, firefighters did a wonderful job, cheered on by dozens and dozens of spectators who lined the closed highway.

In another coincidence, my husband was on the phone with his parents in Windsor Junction, N.S., shortly after 9 p.m. Tuesday night. His mom mentioned the incident – but it hadn’t yet been on the news wire (we know, because he works for the news wire!). My husband’s sister lives in New Brunswick but used to live in Baddeck. She had gotten a call from a friend in Baddeck telling her about the incident. She then told her mom, who told my husband, who told the wire service. News travels.   

-

Yesterday, here in southern Ontario, was the coldest day of the winter thus far. Colder than Winnipeg, which is to say, cold enough to end all conversations about how cold it is. And on days like this, we can optimistically let our minds wander to the dog days of August when this same part of the world is perpetually under smog warnings and soaking humidity.

In Montreal, it seems, they don't need to wait until summer for smog.

Environment Canada has issued a 25 smog alerts already this winter. It's a phenomena brought on by the propensity of Quebecers to burn wood to help keep their homes warm. Many, many homes in Quebec – even the most modern – have wood-burning stoves for supplemental heat. It's a throw back to the 1970s when people didn't trust Hydro Quebec to keep the power on during the bitter Canadian winters. And during the devastating 1998 ice storm, those stoves were a God send for thousands of families forced to cope without electricity for weeks. After the ice storm, even more people bought wood stoves, just in case.

That was then. Now clean is green and Montreal is looking at banning wood-burning stoves to eliminate the winter smog.

When I was first married (way back in the 80s!) we used wood to heat our tiny house near Halifax, which was primarily heated with expensive, coal-fired electricity. It was cozy and warm; it was also a lot of work, lugging dirty logs into the house. I prefer a programmable thermostat today.

But as we say in the fire biz, where there's smoke, there's fire. And in Montreal's case, where there's fire, there's smog. You can read more in the Globe .

 

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