'Fuel break': Yukon's wildland management conducting burn near Mary Lake
CBC
Whitehorse residents can expect another two days of hazy skies and smoky smell lingering over the city as the Yukon Wildland Fire Management is currently burning a 10-hectares zone near Mary Lake.
The prescribed fire operation, called the Mary Lake Shaded Fuel Break, is removing debris left over from last year's fuel reduction work, regenerating the ground for better growing conditions and creating a strategic fire guard to the city and surrounding subdivisions.
Doug Cote, the Emergency Response Officer in the Southern Lakes Region for Wildland Fire Management, said this prescribed fire will act as a fire break between the Carcross valley and Whitehorse.
"We identified this area quite a while ago as a key area because it's at the top of the Carcross valley and runs straight into Whitehorse," he said.
The prescribed site, which is 30 minutes away from the city, is at high-risk of fire due to continuous fuel and fire hazard along the path. There hasn't been a natural wildfire there in over 80 years, explained Cote.
Cote said he had been working on getting this project approved and running for almost a decade.
"It means quite a bit to me, personally, to be out here," he said as the ground behind him burned in linear sections.
Cote added prescribed fires are "the most cost effective and the most operationally effective" to create a fuel break and fuel mitigation.
And while fires are a natural and necessary step in the boreal forest, "a planned fire is much better than an unplanned fire," he added.
The Yukon had a record-breaking fire season over the summer, which is why the fire department wants to work on proactive measures to reduce the risk of future wildfires near Whitehorse and surrounding areas.
Mike Fancie, the fire information officer with the Yukon government, said the strategic fire operation by Mary Lake is part of a long-term plan.
"We are removing the more flammable coniferous trees that pull a greater fire hazard and replacing them with aspen trees that are more fire resistant," he said.
Currently, the trees and debris in that area present a greater risk of potentially catastrophic wildfire, should one occur, hence the area will be replaced next year by an aspen plantation.
"Because the aspen plants are so small when they go into the ground, clearing it off of all that slash this year is going to give them a much better chance of survival next year," Fancie said.
The leader of Canada's Green Party had some strong words for Nova Scotia's Progressive Conservatives while joining her provincial counterpart on the campaign trail. Elizabeth May was in Halifax Saturday to support the Nova Scotia Green Party in the final days of the provincial election campaign. She criticized PC Leader Tim Houston for calling a snap election this fall after the Tories passed legislation in 2021 that gave Nova Scotia fixed election dates every four years.