Because fighting fires in cottage country is a tricky thing.
Unfortunately, many ignore them.
Fire bans include fireworks.
I know I write for those who agree with me.
The solution? Phone the fire department if you see an illegal fire.
Access in cottage country is the first issue. The woods have been dry this spring, with an early thaw, and not nearly enough spring showers.
Citiots ignore these at their peril |
Not so.
Muskoka had it bad last weekend – despite a TOTAL FIRE BAN
Volunteers and EMS crews work hard on land and in the water |
Muskoka long weekend fires
Firefighters were looking for boaters to ferry firefighters to the island in Huntsville.
“When crews arrived on the scene they found an injured man trapped on a three-foot ledge half way down the rock face of a cliff. They also discovered about four acres of land on fire.
Additional fire crews from Lake of Bays and Muskoka Lakes were brought in Monday to assist the exhausted Huntsville and Port Sydney fire crews to contain the fire. Crews will remain on scene for the next couple days cleaning up hot spots and patrolling to make sure the fire is out.”
This is serious business.
Firefighters are busy enough with fires caused by nature, let alone those caused by people.
Northern Ontario has it bad now
The Ministry of Natural Resources publishes 'Current Fire Situations', and it look terrible.
Year | Fires | Hectares |
---|---|---|
2011 to date | 148 | 1,452 |
10 year avg. (mean) | 187 | 4,489 |
2012 to date | 335 | 29,304 |
Northeastern Ontario continued to receive new fires on Wednesday May 23 as another 10 starts were confirmed. There are now 45 fires active in the province, 43 of them in the Northeast Region.
Visit the MNR interactive map |
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