Caddy Lake fire shrinking, evacuation orders lifted in Whiteshell, northwest Ontario
Fire detected May 5 in Whiteshell Provincial Park forced dozens to leave area
Cottagers and year-round residents are heading back to their properties in Caddy Lake, West Hawk Lake and Ingolf, Ont., after officials from the Manitoba and Ontario governments lifted forest fire evacuation orders at 8 a.m. Tuesday.
Two forest fires straddling the Manitoba-Ontario border, first detected May 5, forced dozens of evacuations. One burned in the Nopiming Provincial Park area east of Beresford Lake and into Ontario, while the other fire was in Whiteshell Provincial Park, northeast of Caddy Lake, and northwestern Ontario.
Bill Benson and his wife had three hours to gather their belongings and get out 10 days ago. He has been staying on the south side of West Hawk Lake, across the lake from his property, watching the fire puff clouds of smoke into the sky nearby.
Benson said he was most looking forward to getting back into his daily routines.
"Having a nice soak in our bathtub, get cleaned up, doing some laundry and just looking around," he said. "Just looking forward to spending time in our own veranda and our own place tonight."
"It's nerve-racking to sit there and watch flames across the lake. You're kind of sitting there wondering what will happen," he said.
Residents were excited about returning to their cabins and homes, he said.
"People are very anxious. They want to get home," he said.
- Evacuation orders for Caddy Lake, West Hawk Lake and Ingolf, Ont. to be lifted
- Wallace Lake cottager frustrated with 'limited' Manitoba wildfire updates
People were asked to leave last week because the fire near Caddy Lake was spreading and edging towards more densely populated areas. Many homes and cottages were under evacuation orders, but because it is still early in the season, a lot of cabins were still unoccupied.
Hunt Lake and McGillivray Falls trails to be reopened today. Mantario Trail to remain closed. <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/Manitoba?src=hash">#Manitoba</a> <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/mbfire?src=hash">#mbfire</a>
—@MBGovNews
Evacuation orders for Nora Lake and Florence Lake remain in place. <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/Manitoba?src=hash">#Manitoba</a> <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/mbfire?src=hash">#mbfire</a>
—@MBGovNews
Evacuees were anxious in those first few days after being forced to leave. Harbottle and others thought people weren't given enough information about the spread or severity of the fire, or whether particular lots were at greater risk of being burned.
But fire updates given to property owners at community meetings over the past few days helped calm nerves, Harbottle said.
The four to five families that rent the cottages owned by Harbottle are looking forward to heading back into cabin country, he said.
"It's their homes. They live here year-round. It's much harder on them," he said.
On Tuesday morning, Harbottle said none of his lots were lost in the fire and he wasn't aware of any minor fire damage to his properties.
Evacuation orders in fire-affected areas over 100 kilometres to the north are expected to be lifted Tuesday afternoon.
Evacuation orders for Beresford Lake, Wallace Lake to be lifted at 1 p.m. today <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/Manitoba?src=hash">#Manitoba</a> <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/mbfire?src=hash">#mbfire</a>
—@MBGovNews
All travel, burning permit restrictions for eastern, central, western Manitoba lifted – but check with RMs too. <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/Manitoba?src=hash">#Manitoba</a> <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/mbfire?src=hash">#mbfire</a>
—@MBGovNews