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Laura King A vacation update . . .
Written by Laura King   

Thursday, Aug. 19, 2010

A vacation update . . .

Yesterday was a work day despite being on vacation (sound familiar?).  It started with a visit to the Nova Scotia Firefighters School in beautiful Waverley, N.S., on lovely Powder Mill Lake. The word bucolic probably isn’t used often to describe fire school locations but it was a gorgeous August day under a vacation-blue sky and the setting was, well, bucolic.

As executive director John Cunningham (a fellow Caper!) explained, the school is the last non-government volunteer recruiting fire training school and it trains 6,000 students a year, 90 per cent of whom are volunteers who take evening and weekend courses. I hope to catch up with the school’s new mobile training unit here in Sydney, N.S., over the next couple of days. Stay tuned for photos! (Incidentally, the best line of the day - from instructor Lorne Piercey to a group of students in the pre-employment program: "These are gloves. When you're not wearing them put them in the pockets of your bunker gear. Left glove, left pocket. Right glove, right pocket." Much nodding and taking of notes!).

Incident No. 1

Shortly after leaving the fire school and doing some conference calls and e-mails from the parking lot, I was visiting in nearby Windsor Junction and made a Tims stop in Fall River, at which point two tankers, a chief’s vehicle and the RCMP whizzed by us en route to a structure fire in Fall River Village (which, as an aside, voted about 20 years ago, when municipal water was brought into the surrounding neighbourhoods, to forgo hydrants). Eleven apparatus from Halifax Regional Municipality’s new Lakeview, Fall River, Windsor Junction Station 45, Waverley and Lower Sackville, were on the scene for the vehicle/garage/house fire, which made for some traffic chaos. There were no injuries (the rest of the day wouldn’t turn out so well). I resisted the temptation to go take pictures – while on vacation!

Incident No. 2

A couple of hours later we were cruising east on the Trans-Canada toward Cape Breton and making very good time (as Ontario drivers in Nova Scotia tend to do) despite the numbers of gargantuan RVs and travel trailers. The divided highway east of Halifax – which I swear the Nova Scotia government(s) has been building since the 1970s – had given way to two lanes in Pictou County (home of the 2009 Maritime chiefs’ conference) and Springsteen was playing – loudly – on the iPod when we saw the sign: WARNING: Detour at exit 27 – accident. Fire trucks, police cars, Nova Scotia government vehicles, blockades, pylons, dozens of people in orange vests . . . Sadly, two drivers were killed when a tractor trailer carrying used oil and a pickup truck collided. Detour: 30 minutes behind a massive RV (which was behind a kilometer-long line of trucks and more RVs) over dangerously narrow, winding roads. You can read the story here.

Incident No. 3

We had just left the traffic behind from Incident No. 2 and were minutes from the Canso Causeway and a long-anticipated pit stop at Tims in Port Hawkesbury. More orange detour signs. More fire trucks. More Nova Scotia highways personnel. Again, sadly, a Nova Scotia woman was killed near Monastery, N.S., after a passenger vehicle and a tour bus collided shortly after 4 p.m. on the Trans-Canada (you can read the story here). The lengthy detour through the lovely - actually, bucolic - village of Havre Boucher was pleasant and the view was lovely. There was no Tims.

We reached our destination in 4.5 hours despite the detours and we’re staying off the roads today! If you’re on vacation – and I know many of you are – drive safely!

 

 

 

 

COMMENTS

Guest
Written by Guest on 2010-09-03 13:18:28
Laura - That was the start a tough week here in Pictou County that saw 5 fatalities in 5 days along the same stretch of road.  
Pictou County is very lucky to have such amazing fire departments that seem to always work seamlessly together.  
 
This summer we have had many multi agency mutual aid calls... some lasting for over a week. 
Let’s hope it starts to settle down for a while.  
Love the site and the blog.  

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