![Twin Lakes Beach residents picking up pieces after wall of ice damages lakefront properties](https://i.cbc.ca/1.7180218.1713704458!/fileImage/httpImage/image.jpg_gen/derivatives/16x9_620/mavine-smit.jpg)
Twin Lakes Beach residents picking up pieces after wall of ice damages lakefront properties
CBC
Residents of a small community on the shores of Lake Manitoba have been left to pick up the pieces after an ice wall crushed some cabins and other structures in the area.
Strong winds on Thursday pushed the swell of ice right to some people's doors, damaging lakefront properties on Twin Lakes Beach, in the Rural Municipality of St. Laurent.
Mavine Smit's deck was upended by the wall, which crept through her yard and stopped right at her doorstep.
Smit said she's glad she wasn't home went it happened.
"We took a look at our security cameras and we could see that this all happened within three minutes, and once it started, the momentum of it was just ferocious," she said. "Think of a tsunami. Just like a wave of ice that was just coming really fast."
Smit said she was surprised something like this happened so early in the year.
"You could see the ice is still really, really thick to have it be able to move that quickly," she said.
"The winds blew all night and they blew all day yesterday … You just don't know if the ice is done for this first push."
Roger Gillis, emergency coordinator for the RM of St. Laurent, said the municipality tries to provide the best protections it can and keep roads accessible so people can get to their properties. But in cases like this, "each individual is on their own."
"The ice is very destructive. It has an immense amount of power and we have no control over it at all," Gillis said.
"When the wind is blowing and it pushes it up, all we can do is sit and watch and make sure that we don't have to evacuate anyone or we don't have to [remove anyone] from peril."
WATCH | Strong winds blow ice wall onto some Lake Manitoba homes
Gillis said he's seen this kind of damage in other areas around the lake, but most people just "rebuild and move on."