Northeast Forest Fire Update – August 5

There were four new wildland fires discovered by late afternoon August 4.

  • Sudbury 25 is being held at 0.1 of a hectare, on the west side of Scotia Lake, east of Highway 144.
  • Chapleau 7 is being held at 0.1 of a hectare, approximately 4 kilometres northeast of Angus Lake.
  • Timmins 6 is being held at 0.2 of a hectare, north of rat Lake, on the west side of Highway 144.
  • Timmins 7 is being held at 0.4 of a hectare, northwest of Burns Lake, on the east side of Highway 144.

At the time of this update, there are three other active wildland fires in the region.

  • Cochrane 10 measures 74 hectares and is being observed, approximately 100 kilometres southeast of Moose Factory.
  • Peterborough 1 is under control at 10 hectares and is located west of route 15.
  • Peterborough 2 is under control at 0.2 of a hectare. It is located east of route 509, approximately 5 kilometres northwest of Silver Lake.

The forest fire hazard ranges mostly from moderate to high across the central and southern portion of the Northeast Region, with a few isolated areas west of Onaping Falls, and near Wenebegon Lake showing an extreme hazard. Both the northern part of the region and the southeastern most part of the region are showing a low to moderate hazard.
For up to date forest fire hazard conditions in your area, see the interactive fire map at Ontario.ca/forestfires.

Help prevent forest fires

Adopt safe campfire practices! Choose the site of your campfire carefully and keep your fire small. Stay nearby: never leave it unattended. Put your fire out by drowning it with water. Be sure that it is extinguished prior to leaving the site. Stir the ashes with a stick to uncover hot coals and then drown it again. You can never be too safe.

Consider alternatives to burning brush or yard waste, such as chipping or composting when possible, or saving burn piles for the fall or after the fire season. Use of outdoor fires must follow the outdoor burning rules set out in the Forest Fire Prevention Act of Ontario. Fires are to be started no sooner than two hours before sunset and extinguished no later than two hours after sunrise. Fires should never be left unattended and tools and water should be close at hand to put the fire out. More details on outdoor burning regulations can be found online at Ontario.ca/forestfire

More Information

For updates on highway closures, check Ontario511 or @OPPCommunicationsNER on Twitter, and Ontario Provincial Police-Northeast Region on Facebook.

For information about the current forest fire situation: 1-888-220-7242

For updates on the fire situation, visit ontario.ca/forestfire or follow us on Twitter @ONforestfires.

To report a forest fire located north of the French and Mattawa rivers, please dial 310-FIRE. To report a forest fire south of these rivers, dial 911.

Natural Resources Forestry
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