Nova Scotia

Volunteers cooking hundreds of meals a day for crews battling Shelburne wildfire

Volunteers in Shelburne, N.S., have transformed the Birchtown Community Hall into a meal distribution centre for firefighters and a gathering place for people in need of a hot meal.

'I just wanted to make sure that everybody had a safe place to come with good food,' says volunteer

A man stands next to a griddle full of bacon. He's holding up a piece of bacon with tongs and smiling.
Les Demings was one of about a dozen volunteers at the Birchtown Community Hall cooking up breakfast on Friday morning. Many of the meals were packed up and distributed to workers on the front lines of fighting the wildfire. (Shaina Luck/CBC)

Volunteers in Shelburne, N.S., have transformed the Birchtown Community Hall into a meal distribution centre for firefighters and other first responders, and a gathering place for anyone in need of a hot meal.

On Friday morning, about a dozen volunteers were frying up eggs, sausages, bacon, and blueberry pancakes for breakfast. Previous meals have included lobster, scallop burgers, and turkey dinners.

"I didn't want the glory of being the volunteer of the year or anything. I just wanted to make sure that everybody had a safe place to come with good food," said Laura Torak, who's been helping to organize the volunteers and ensure things run smoothly in the kitchen.

Torak owns a restaurant in Shelburne that had to close for a week because many of her staff were forced to evacuate their homes.

A woman in a black t-shirt is cracking eggs into a metal bowl. There are stacks of other breakfast ingredients on the counter around her.
Laura Torak is putting her restaurant skills to use by helping co-ordinate the volunteers that have turned this community hall into a meal distribution centre. (Shaina Luck/CBC)

Between serving breakfast, lunch, and dinner every day, Torak said it's hard to keep track of how many meals they've cooked up, but on their busiest day it was close to 300.

Some food will get packed up and delivered to firefighters, RCMP, emergency management officials and anyone else working on the front lines of the fires.

Some food will stay on hand at the community hall, for anyone who wants to drop by for a hot meal.

"When the firefighters first started to come in, we would clap for them, and then it got to the point that they were clapping for us," she said.

"We've got nicknames for people … we've made friendships."

Penny Smith is one of the volunteers helping in the kitchen and making deliveries. She's also the warden of the Municipality of the District of Shelburne.

A woman uses metal tongs to put pancakes and sausages into cardboard takeaway containers. More volunteers are prepping other meals in the background.
Volunteers at the Birchtown Community Hall in Shelburne, N.S., are cooking up hot meals every day for frontline workers and other people impacted by wildfires. (Shaina Luck/CBC)

She said the decision to open the kitchen was "spontaneous" and the community didn't miss a beat in figuring out a way to support their friends and families on the front lines.

"They're very thankful for it, and we're thankful to be able to provide it, because it gives us the opportunity to give back to the community who are giving back so much, as it is, to us," she said.

Donations of food and other items have been pouring in from Yarmouth to Sydney.

A man in a blue Nova Scotia hoodie stands in the back of a reefer truck. There are flats of soda, water bottles, and other beverages stacked behind him.
Bob Stewart, affectionately called 'Reefer Bob' by the other volunteers, helps keep the two refrigerated trucks stocked and organized with donations of food and other items that have been pouring in from across the province. (Shaina Luck/CBC)

"It's not just a community event, it's provincewide … it's amazing," said Bob Stewart, from the back of one of two refrigerated trucks parked outside the community centre that are being used to store donated food.

Now that displaced residents are allowed to return to their homes, Torak said the number of meals going out the door has started to dwindle.

But she said there are still lots of people out there working on the front lines, including her son. who is a volunteer firefighter.

"I'm getting a little tired, maybe I need a little break. But people say 'you need your rest,' and I say: 'I'll rest when people can go home.'"

With files from Shaina Luck