Tragic and amazing how calm the mass exodus has been.
I wonder if big oil will step up and start helping these people whose backs they have profited off for decades.
Tragic and amazing how calm the mass exodus has been. I wonder if big oil will step up and start helping these people whose backs they have profited off for decades.
I know, eh? It's amazing how there hasn't been a single injury.
Tragic and amazing how calm the mass exodus has been. I wonder if big oil will step up and start helping these people whose backs they have profited off for decades.
??? Did the people not get paid?
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America guarantees equal opportunity, not equal outcome...
Tragic and amazing how calm the mass exodus has been. I wonder if big oil will step up and start helping these people whose backs they have profited off for decades.
I know, eh? It's amazing how there hasn't been a single injury.
A flock of flirting flamingos is pure, passionate, pink pandemonium-a frenetic flamingle-mangle-a discordant discotheque of delirious dancing, flamboyant feathers, and flamingo lingo.
Humans are the leading cause of wildfires in Canada, says a forest fire researcher who believes the latest blaze that has ripped through parts of Fort McMurray, Alta., is no exception.
Mike Flanagan, a professor of wildland fires at the University of Alberta, says the fire's proximity to the city, as well as data that shows there were no lightning strikes in the area, lead him to believe the cause of the fire was likely human.
"And in spring it's heavily loaded on the side of people-caused fires," Flanagan said.
An average of 1,200 wildfires are reported in Alberta each year, and half of those fires are caused by humans, according to the National Fire Database. Lightning is the second-leading cause with 47 per cent.
Officials were still investigating the cause of the latest fire, which remained out of control on Wednesday as it raged around Fort McMurray, a city of about 80,000 people located 435 kilometres northeast of Edmonton.
However, Flanagan said weather conditions in Western Canada have been perfect for wildfires as the warm, dry winter has led to an abundance of dead, dry leaves and wood ready to light up.
Gail Bibeau estimates she had about three minutes to pack up as much as she could and flee her Fort McMurray home.
"Yesterday, we woke up and it wasn't even like there was a fire in the area. It was totally blue skies as far as you can see," she recalled. "Then all of a sudden it was like dragon's breath, the whole hillside was in flames."
My son has so many friends who moved to the oil patch to make their fortunes.
Thankfully, and amazingly, no injuries, so we don't have to worry about people we know.
Fort McMurray wildfire grows 8 times larger as battle continues
Supercharged by winds of up to 70 km/h, the Fort McMurray wildfire ballooned to 85,000 hectares overnight and is now raging across a wide front south of the city.
Amazing pictures, welts. It is also amazing they were able to evacuate so quickly.
Is the fire under control yet?
Not even close.
They're expecting it to get worse today due to high winds, and more communities are being evacuated.
Apparently during the first evacuation many people were at work and could not go home to get anything, including their pets.
I can't imagine losing everything like this, it is just horrible.
I see the Gov't has said they will match whatever the Red Cross raises as a relief fund.
I hurt for all the pets trapped in their houses with no way to get out.
Losing everything would be terrible but insurance will replace most of it. But there is no replacing the beloved pets. I feel sick just thinking about it.
It's good that's everyone is helping and everyone is pitching in.
There are makeshift "Evacuee Centres" every 20 miles or so where you can get everything from a hamburger to dog food to diapers.
People are opening up their homes to strangers who have nowhere else to go.