Newfoundlanders living in Nova Scotia recount tense flight from out-of-control wildfire
CBC
Thousands of people in Nova Scotia have been forced to evacuate their homes as large wildfires continue to burn across the province.
Among them are some residents originally from Newfoundland and Labrador who say it has been a tense few days.
"We were just home pressure washing the deck, getting everything ready for summer, our daughter was at the lake with her friend and we just started seeing a lot more smoke coming up from Tantallon," said Krista Smith-Ryan, a nurse practitioner and retired lieutenant with the Royal Canadian Navy, originally from St. John's.
Smith-Ryan and her family live in Hammonds Plains, just west of Tantallon and about 25 kilometres west of Halifax where one of the biggest fires continues to rage.
On Sunday afternoon posts began to crop up in her subdivision's Facebook group from neighbours speculating about what was happening. Around 4:45 p.m., Smith-Ryan said, heavy smoke was blowing through Tantallon into the neighbourhood where she lives with her husband, Todd Ryan, a chief in the Royal Canadian Navy.
"We decided then that maybe it was probably time to start packing a bag for us to go," Smith-Ryan said.
"About 7:45 p.m. we got the evacuation order. The alert went out officially across the province. We had already by that time gotten our things together and pulled our passports, documents, birth certificates, irreplaceable photos and clothes for about 72 hours and just got in the car and went."
Smith-Ryan and her husband put their decades of training to immediate use.
"You want to stay on task, you want to keep focused," she said.
"If we stay organized, we stay on task, we feel like we have some kind of control over the situation."
Brad Holwell, originally from Lewisporte, and his family live in Stillwater Lake, just south of Hammonds Plains and Tantallon.
Holwell, his wife, daughter and family cat fled to Bedford, N.S., and are staying in a hotel to wait out the fire.
"As things got a little out of hand we just decided to pack up," Holwell said Tuesday.
"The smoke was so intense and it was just focused in one area. It was pretty crazy to see."