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Cottage Life

Cottage Q&A: How many wildfires do cigarettes cause?

This summer, near our cottage, there were a few fires where cigarette butts were deemed to be the cause. I’m concerned that some people on our lake don’t understand the dangers of improper cigarette butt disposal. How should people be disposing of used cigarettes at the lake, where the vegetation can get tinder-dry in the summer?—Jolene Macfarlane, via email 

You have a valid concern. Cigarettes don’t account for the majority of fires, but they certainly account for some of them. In the summer of 2019, for example, seven Vancouver Island fires over the course of seven days were attributed to discarded cigarette butts. 

Part of the problem is that a butt can appear as if it’s extinguished, but if it lands on burnable material, it can still ignite. A stubbed-out cigarette that someone tosses from a car window, assuming it’ll land harmlessly on the pavement, could bounce, roll, and end up in vegetation growing on the side of the road. For obvious reasons, “the risk for a discarded cigarette to start a forest fire or a grass fire goes up when we haven’t had much precipitation, and the ground layer is more dry than normal,” says Michael Peake, the fire prevention officer for the town of Bracebridge, Ont. Certain plant material—such as dry peat moss—is particularly good at “insulating” the cigarette. “We’ve been to numerous fires caused by smokers’ materials extinguished in a planter containing dry peat moss,” says Peake. “We’ve seen peat moss insulate for seven hours before the cigarette started a fire.”

13 quick safety tips to prevent fires at the cottage

If you’re worried about forest fires in particular, the good (er, sort of) news is that stats show that cigarettes are not anywhere near the most common source of wildfires. In Canada, about 50 per cent of wildfires are caused by lightning strikes, says Mike Flannigan, the director of the Western Partnership for Wildland Fire Science at the University of Alberta. The other 50 per cent are “human-caused”—for instance, campfires, ATV activity, burning debris, and in some cases, arson. 

Smokers have no control over lightning, or hot ATV tailpipes, or arsonists. They do have control over their butts. If you have cottage guests who smoke, discard their ashes and used cigarettes into a jar or a metal bucket with a lid, and keep it outside, says Peake. “The lid takes away the oxygen to the cigarette, putting it out almost instantly.” When it’s time to empty the bucket, wet the contents to make certain that everything is extinguished. “Then it should be safe for disposal in the garbage,” says Peake.

How to dispose of your fireplace ash

Time for a public service announcement! If a smoker is outside somewhere in the woods, with no ashtray, bucket, or jar, “I would suggest finding a puddle or a hard surface, like a rock, to extinguish the cigarette,” says Peake. “Ideally, detaching the filter and taking it back to a place where you can properly dispose of it is the best idea. Filters aren’t compostable and have plastics that will not degrade.” Never butt a cigarette on the forest floor, he says. “Dry needles, grass, and leaves may combust after you’ve left the area.” 

Got a question for Cottage Q&A? Send it to answers@cottagelife.com.

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Cottage Q&A: Portable saunas vs bylaws

We want to set up one of those portable tent saunas that are heated by a woodstove. Do we need a permit for this? Are there any other bylaws governing them at the cottage?—Sidney Indy, via email

There could be. “As always, an owner should communicate with the local authority having jurisdiction,” says Marty Herbert, the team leader with building and bylaw services for B.C.’s Columbia Shuswap Regional District. Bylaws can vary between municipalities, and just because a tent sauna doesn’t meet the definition of “building” under your provincial building code (which means you likely wouldn’t need a permit), your local building authority or fire department might still have restrictions.

Buy the Way: This family saved money by buying land and building a yurt

Under zoning bylaws, some jurisdictions could consider the tent a “structure,” and as such, “it needs to comply with all applicable zoning provisions,” says Noella Floyd-Foulds, a permit clerk with the building department and bylaw enforcement for Dysart et al., Ont. “We wouldn’t regulate how long you can keep it up, but it would need to meet all water, lot line, and septic setbacks,” she says. “On our typical waterfront lots, these setbacks would be 20 or 30 metres from the water, 4.5 metres from side lot lines, and five metres from a septic distribution field.”

As for potential fire bylaws, it’s possible that burning or campfire restrictions could apply, says Herbert. (Your municipality might treat the woodstove as an outdoor fire.)

Is incinerating paper waste environmentally acceptable?

Mike Peake, a fire prevention officer for the town of Bracebridge, Ont., says that his department certainly wouldn’t do any kind of inspection on a tent sauna. That’s not because there aren’t any possible fire risks, but because a tent sauna wouldn’t require it under the Ontario Fire Code. Still, you are putting a woodstove inside of a tent. Yes, the stove is designed for the tent, and yes, the tent—unlike a regular camping tent—is designed to withstand the stove’s heat. But, “I feel this in itself may become risky over time as people become complacent,” says Peake. “I would highly recommend to anyone owning these saunas to strictly abide by the manufacturer’s installation, care, and maintenance instructions,” he says. “And make sure that you never let your guard down.”

Got a question for Cottage Q&A? Send it to answers@cottagelife.com.

This article was originally published in the August 2022 issue of Cottage Life.

 

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Over 300 properties, mountain resort, ordered to evacuate Wildfire zone in B.C.

Authorities in B.C. ordered residents of over 300 properties southwest of Penticton to evacuate due to ongoing wildfires.

BC Wildfire Service says the Keremeos Creek wildfire grew overnight between Friday and Saturday, and again between Sunday and Monday. 

In a press conference, Bryan Zandberg, information officer for BC Wildfire Service, says the nearly 2,800 hectare fire’s growth and trajectory is difficult to predict.  “Overall though, it is not a very organized fire, so we can’t just point and say ‘oh yeah it’s traveling this way or that way,’’’ he said. 

Zandberg says 229 firefighters were working on Tuesday morning to help fight and protect against the fire. Over the course of the weekend, over 83 loads of retardant were dropped. 

The Regional District of Okanagan–Similkameen says residents of 324 properties have been ordered to evacuate so far. The district also says over 438 properties are currently on alert, meaning those residents should be ready to evacuate on very short notice.

Among the properties told to evacuate was Apex Mountain Resort. The resort is using snowmakers to keep the fire at bay, as seen from their live webcam feed.

A cabin is the only building that has been damaged by the fire, so far. Officials say no one was injured at the cabin.

As of Tuesday morning, B.C. Hwy. 3A was closed. Zandberg says emergency efforts have ramped up and part of the reason the highway closed was to assist ongoing firefighting efforts.

Officials are urging the public to follow evacuation orders. Zandberg says those who do not leave put themselves and emergency crews at greater risk. He also says by not leaving, people could be interfering with emergency operations.

People in the area can monitor the situation via the Wildfire Service and Regional District of Okanagan–Similkameen websites. Officials also urge members of the Similkameen Indian Band and the Penticton Indian Band to check their community websites to stay up-to-date with wildfire information and emergency measures.

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Can fires be good for the environment? The benefits of prescribed burning

On a quiet April morning, when the wind is low and the soil still damp from snowmelt, smoke rises like fog from Lake Simcoe’s De Grassi Point. Tongues of flame sprint through tall grass, creep beneath oaks and pines, lick at downed twigs and dead leaves. Within hours, four hectares in Innisfree, Ont., a neighbourhood of homes and cottages, will be scorched and blackened by fire. No one will call 9-1-1.

This isn’t a wildfire, an arson, or an accident. It’s a “good” fire, a prescribed fire that treats and heals remnants of a rare tallgrass prairie and red oak-white pine savanna. “It’s modelled after the natural burns that keep the savannas open and functioning,” says Conrad Heidenreich, a York University geography professor emeritus and a long-time cottager, now retired to the Point. “Burning kills invading trees and shrubs, and releases the seeds of savanna species that are adapted to burns.”

Fire “is an essential tool for this kind of restoration work,” adds Peter Shuttleworth, restoration project specialist with the Lake Simcoe Region Conservation Authority. Without the flames this tract of Ontario’s pre-settlement landscape—now designated a provincial Area of Natural and Scientific Interest (ANSI)—would be swallowed up by the surrounding forest. 

“A fire that’s properly planned and managed is quite easily controlled,” Shuttleworth stresses. Timing is everything: ignite dead grass when there’s the right mix of wind, humidity, and moisture in the soil and vegetation, and the result is a low-intensity surface burn. Reptiles are safe in their burrows; mature trees may be singed but will survive. The roots and shoots of prairie plants lie safe in the dampness while flames torch the dry thatch, clearing invading shrubs and poplars. Done right, “it’s not a raging inferno,” Shuttleworth adds. “Most often, the burn is low and slow. It’s really only the grass and leaf litter burning.”

Still, the idea of a “good” fire is a tough sell after the smoky skies and the incineration of Lytton, B.C., last summer. Despite decades of fire prevention and lectures from Smokey Bear, there’s no shortage of “bad” fires that menace communities and burn so hot they sterilize soil and kill plant cover, with long-term environmental losses. The problem is what scientists call the “fire paradox”: the more you suppress fire, the more fuel stacks up in the bush, stoking catastrophic blazes in the future. 

We may already be seeing the results. The area scorched by wildfires in Canada has doubled since the early 1970s and climate change is making the situation worse. Conservative projections suggest the area burned will double again—at the very least—by the end of this century. If “bad” fires are becoming more likely, it makes the idea of “good” fire more timely. What if careful burning can reduce the wildfire threat and offer ecological benefits too?

This idea is not new. As the continent’s original fire managers, “Indigenous people have been using fire as a good thing for millennia,” says Canadian Forest Service research scientist Amy Cardinal Christianson, a member of the Métis Nation of Alberta. “By burning in a low-intensity, controlled way, we use fire to improve the health of the plants and animals we depend on.” First Nations burned to protect settlements from wildfire and cleared undergrowth to aid travel. Fire promoted the growth of plants for food and medicine, created habitat for game birds and animals, cleared and nourished crop fields, sparked the regrowth of grazing lands, assisted in the hunt, and even controlled ticks that prey on deer and moose. 

This type of Indigenous-controlled, early spring or late-fall fire never really disappeared, but modern fire suppression policies reduced it to a faint glow of its former self. Now, Cardinal Christianson and groups including the First Nations’ Emergency Services Society of British Columbia (FNESS) and the BC Wildfire Service are rekindling the practice.

“We’re trying to find out which communities are interested in cultural burning, what their objectives are, where they traditionally burned, and why,” adds Peter Hisch, FNESS forest fuel management specialist. Traditional benefits went beyond fire’s impact on the land: families worked together and passed teachings about land, language, and spirituality between generations. Hisch is trying to recapture this by making Indigenous culture “part and parcel” of modern First Nations fire management.

The result melds community wildfire protection with, say, the growth of saskatoon berries, or forage for deer and moose, or any of dozens of other benefits. “It’s almost like a social justice issue, putting Indigenous people back in a leadership role on their territories,” Cardinal Christianson says. “Good fire can help us preserve and promote our culture. Part of the result is healthy people, healthy nature, and a healthy environment.” 

But there’s a long way to go. Provincial and federal funding is generally restricted to reserves, and “some reserves are so small they hardly encompass the housing,” Hisch says. Other First Nations prefer to run their own programs without the help or oversight of outside agencies. “As one-off, ad hoc projects we’ve been doing these burns for years,” Hisch adds. “But as a big, thought-out process with all the parties involved, we’re just starting out.” 

De Grassi Point lies at another intersection of “good” fires, past and present. Five thousand years ago it was the eastern extension of a tallgrass prairie, a riot of tall grasses and wildflowers with names like big bluestem and sky blue aster. Sprawling from the centre of the continent during a warm, dry period, this empire of grass evolved with lightning-triggered natural fires. As the climate turned wetter and favoured forest growth, Indigenous fire maintained these eastern tallgrass prairies and savannas.

In 1793, Upper Canada’s lieutenant-governor, John Graves Simcoe, stopped at a Mississauga Village on De Grassi Point during an expedition to Georgian Bay. He bought corn from the Mississaugas—which was likely “grown on the area that is now the savanna,” says Conrad. Like the earlier Hurons (Wendat) and Petuns (Tionontati) to the west and northwest, the Mississaugas on Lake Simcoe used fire to clear and fertilize cornfields.

A side benefit was the production of red oaks. Shielded by their thick bark, oaks survived the fires that scorched competing maples and poplars. In turn, they shed acorns that could be harvested for flour or left on the ground to entice game including deer, bear, and wild turkey. Today, De Grassi boasts Ontario’s largest stand of red oak—a reminder of the days when at least 24-hectares of the point was a mosaic of Indigenous farm fields, oak groves, berry bushes, and a grassland-savanna hunting preserve, all maintained by fire. 

Check out 7 tips that will help you prevent a forest fire

Now, when fire returns here, as it does every four or five years, it falls from a drip torch, seeding the fields with flaming drops of diesel and gasoline. When the torch ignites, “there’s nothing else happening in my mind beyond that particular moment,” says prescribed burn boss Jason Sickel, of Lands and Forests Consulting. To ensure the fire goes according to plan, “all my focus becomes the burn,” he adds. “It’s almost like meditation.”

With more than 20 years’ experience in prescribed burns, Sickel has spent months choreographing this burn, anticipating its moves, and preparing to conduct this performance.  He has applied for permits, consulted with landowners and neighbours, and waited for the right mix of wind, temperature, humidity, moisture, and vegetation maturity. 

As ignition time nears, Sickel’s crew ensures there is a fire break, clearing dead grass around the perimeter if necessary. They flush wildlife from the fire zone and patrol the boundaries of the blaze with water-tank-equipped ATVs. Because “communication is the key to success for a sustainable burn program,” Sickel says, neighbours are warned well head of time. “You have to get the information out there, let the community know what’s going on, and give them the opportunity to voice concerns.” Most people want to know the burn will be conducted safely—with good reason. “Grass is fine fuel. It ignites quickly and moves like the dickens in wind, faster than you can deal with it if you don’t know what you’re doing,” Hisch says. In most cases, prescribed burning remains a “don’t try this at the cottage” thing. (See “Is Burning for You?,” below.)

The site of these burns—there have been seven since 1998—is Innisfree, a 102-hectare family land trust set up by Conrad’s great-grandfather, Sir Edmund Walker. Humble circumstances limited Walker to an elementary school education, but he rose to become president of the Bank of Commerce (now CIBC) and to play key roles in building the University of Toronto, the Royal Ontario Museum, the Art Gallery of Ontario, and the National Gallery.  He left the land for the use of his descendants. 

“Most of those in the fourth to sixth generation still vacation at the Point in the 18 cottages and houses built by previous generations,” Conrad says. “All of us were raised as conservationists.”

Thanks to the burns, “the difference is amazing between what we had before and what we have now,” he adds. Though there are still problems with invasive plants including dog strangling vine, the prairie has expanded from an embattled 1.5-hectare plot to more than four hectares. “The tall grasses have spread through the length of the area, and there are such beautiful flowers coming up.”  

And the next good fire? Probably 2026. “I’m seeing more interest in maintaining the prairie and savanna among my children’s generation,” Conrad says. “That gives me hope for the future.” 

A volunteer firefighter for 26 years, longtime contributor Ray Ford has seen his share of “bad” and “it coulda been worse” fires, but not so many “good” ones. 

Is burning for you?

Could your cottage neighbourhood host a prescribed burn? It can happen, but you’ll need a whole flock of ducks in a row: burns require months of planning, provincial and municipal approvals, and, in Ontario at least, an opportunity for public comment. Add in liability insurance and a professional crew to rein in the fire, and it’s a high-end weenie roast. At DeGrassi Point, the burn fee runs over $12,000, partly subsidized by a grant from the conservation authority and provincial property-tax relief for conservation lands. You’ll need a good reason for a burn—preserving ecologically rare habitat, for example—with burning as the best option. If there are too many homes and cottages nearby, a less incendiary approach might be better. 

While growing in acceptance, these burns remain uncommon. Across northern Ontario last year Ontario’s Aviation Forest Fire and Emergency Services oversaw prescribed burns on 115 hectares—a miniscule fraction of the roughly 163,000 hectares wildfires singe during an “average” fire year.

Download this Canadian app that detects and tracks forest fires in real-time

This article was originally published as “Friendly Fire” in the May 2022 issue of Cottage Life. 

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Chimney 101: get to know your smokestack

Ready to learn more about how a chimney works? Welcome to Chimney 101.

A chimney’s key attribute is “draft”—its ability to pull air from the stove or fireplace up and out of the cottage. This natural flow through a bed of coals, for example, makes it easier to kindle fires and helps the blaze reach efficient combustion temperature. As a bonus, draft increases as the fire grows. “The greater the temperature difference between the exhaust gases in the chimney and the outside air, the stronger the draft,”says John Gulland, one of the originators of Canada’s Wood Energy Technical Training (WETT) certification program. Likewise, “the taller the chimney, the more draft it will produce.”

The most reliable draft comes from a straight, well-insulated interior chimney that emerges near the highest point of the roof. It’s an express lane for the fire’s heat and combustion gases: they stay hot and ascend quickly. This approach is most common with newer woodstoves and fireplace inserts. 

Almost any departure from this straight-up layout will slow the gases and potentially cause headaches. Every 90-degree elbow in the system causes turbulent airflow, allowing flue gases to bog down in transit. Exterior chimneys are cold, whether they’re brick or metal, making gases less buoyant. Chimneys that are too short or vent too close to a roof produce a draft that is weak or unreliable. The results include smoky downdrafts; smoke that spills from the stove when you open the door; and that dank, sooty odour when the fireplace isn’t in use. Worst of all, these layouts tend to accumulate more creosote, making maintenance a bigger concern.

Worried about creosote? Here’s what to look for

This article was originally published as part of”Up in Smoke” in the Fall 2021 issue of Cottage Life. Read the rest of the story here.