HomeCanadaAfter the firestorm: Loss and hope in Saskatchewan's scorched north

After the firestorm: Loss and hope in Saskatchewan’s scorched north


It was a beautiful day when we hit the road, heading north toward La Ronge. The skies were mostly clear, the air no longer smelling of smoke. It was the kind of day that made it hard to imagine the chaos that had unfolded just weeks before.

Wildfires, made worse by a dry spring, forced thousands of Saskatchewan people from their homes.

Blackened trees stand or sit on the ground after a fire
Some trees still stand, while others have toppled over, near Highway 2 between Weyakwin and La Ronge. (Candice Lipski/CBC)

With the worst of the danger behind, at least for now, we wanted to see what was left behind — in the forests, the communities and the people’s lives — after the flames moved on.

We started seeing the first signs of fire a few kilometres south of Weyakwin. Small patches of burnt forest grew into large, blackened swaths.

The sides of the highways were like graveyards full of skeletons that used to be trees. In some spots, scorched trunks leaned and toppled like fallen matchsticks. In others, the fire had burned so hot that only charred stumps remained.

The flames did not just devour forests. They took homes, too.

Gregg Charles looks into the camera as he sits in a campchair next to a reporter
Gregg Charles sits with CBC’s Theresa Kliem in Air Ronge, speaking about his experience with wildfires and the evacuation. (Candice Lipski/CBC)

Gregg Charles and his wife have been living in a tent in a family member’s backyard in Air Ronge. Their cabin, 40 kilometres south of the village, burned to the ground.

“It’s always been my home. My parents were trappers over there,” Charles said.

“Sewing, beadwork, even a leather jacket [my wife] made for me, all those are lost.”

Saskatoon Morning7:42Gregg Charles has experienced a lot of loss in life. Now he can add his cabin to the list

It’s a place he calls home. Wildfires burned his cabin to the ground and now he and his wife have been staying in a tent at a family member’s back yard in Air Ronge, not knowing what’s next. Gregg invited Saskatoon Morning’s Theresa Kliem and Candice Lipski to stop by.

Both were raised on a trapline. He isn’t interested in staying in a city. He belongs in the wilderness.

Charles is optimistic their living situation will improve soon. His community is working on finding a place for them.

A tent with a tarp hanging over top sits under trees beside a bug tent
Gregg Charles’s tent in his sister-in-law’s backyard. His home was destroyed by a wildfire. (Candice Lipski/CBC)

“I’m just thankful that me and my wife and my other family are OK, that’s the main thing,” he said.

“We can lose structures and stuff like that, we can rebuild. But if you lose a life you can never see that person again.”

Memories in the rubble

Bob Forward also has strong connections to the area.

His family started coming to Nemeiben Lake, just north of La Ronge, in the ’70s. His cabin there has been their home away from home ever since.

Bob Forward drives a boat by a burnt forest.
Saskatoon’s Bob Forward takes his boat to see what is left of his cabin on Nemeiben Lake. (Candice Lipski/CBC)

The sky was clear when we met him at a boat launch as he prepared to check on the cabin for the first time since the fire came through. He didn’t know what was left of it.

After a short trip, the worst was confirmed.

“There’s no cabin there anymore,” Forward said as he pulled up to his dock.

“It’s gone.”

Two men walk up a burnt path to what's left of a cabin after a fire.
Bob Forward and his brother-in-law Rejean Doucet walk up a charred path to see what’s left of the family cabin. (Candice Lipski/CBC)

He made his way through what remained, choking up as he pointed out part of a door that he built with his father-in-law. Nearby, a few of his wife’s books were nothing but crumbling ash.

So many memories, gone in an instant.

WATCH | Heading out by boat to survey wildfire damage: 

Heading out by boat to survey wildfire damage

Join Bob Forward as he checks on his properties for the first time after a wildfire tore through the La Ronge, Sask., area. He finds little left.

“It’s tough to see. There’s a lot of years of work here,” he said, blinking back tears.

“All my relatives that would come over from the U.K., this is one thing they always wanted to do, is come to the cabin.”

Bob said he does not plan to rebuild. Once the area is cleaned up, he will see if anyone is interested in taking over the lease on the land.

“We know it’s climate change. I mean, we’re probably a big part of what’s happening here, because boats and snowmobiles are just terrible on fuel, right?”

Hope for the land

Further south, in Air Ronge, Randy Johns had nature’s strength on his mind.

We met him outside Boreal Heartland, where he was busy catching up on orders delayed by wildfire evacuations.

The company harvests and produces teas, seasonings and dried wild mushrooms gathered from the boreal forest.

A man stands in a forest with scorch marks in some places.
Randy Johns looks over an area where he and his team forage wild plants, including fireweed, seen bottom left. After the fires in 2015, some proactive measures like thinning out trees were taken in the area to slow down future wildfires, he said. (Candice Lipski/CBC)

He took us to a spot close to the community that was hit by fire, pointing out plants already poking their heads out of scorched patches.

“What fire weed does is it grows where there’s been a fire, or the ground is disturbed, and it prepares the forest for its regeneration,” Johns said, pointing out a tall leafy green plant. 

“The evolution of the boreal forest has been based on fire, based around fire. So it’s certainly not a new thing, and it’s part of the natural cycle.”

A man smiles in front of some green bushes.
Randy Johns is the manager of Boreal Heartland, which produces teas, seasonings and dried wild mushrooms gathered from the boreal forest. (Candice Lipski/CBC)

Johns is concerned the fire cycle is changing and maybe becoming more frequent. 

“If you would have caught me a week ago, I would have been more emotional about it,” he said. “Now it’s about moving forward.”

One of the lucky ones

Shelly Lawrence stands on a dock in front of burnt forest at Piprell Lake.
Shelly Lawrence is co-owner of Rainbow Lodge at Piprell Lake. A fire destroyed the forest just across the lake from the lodge. (Candice Lipski/CBC)

The call of a loon welcomed Shelly Lawrence home. She had left during the evacuation of the area around Narrow Hills Provincial Park, where the fire swept through. 

Saskatoon Morning6:23After the fire: surveying the damage of northern wildfires with a Piprell Lake business owner and resident

Shelly Lawrence counts herself as one of the lucky ones. So far, her business Rainbow Lake Lodge at Piprell Lake has survived the devastating wildfires, but others haven’t been as fortunate. Large sections of Narrow Hills Provincial Park, including nearby campgrounds, were badly hit. Saskatoon Morning’s Candice Lipski spent time with Lawrence this week, surveying the damage. 

Lawrence, co-owner of Rainbow Lodge at Piprell Lake, still can’t quite believe the lodge was spared. It stands like an island surrounded by a sea of blackened forest.

“We’re so grateful that the resources were available for us, maybe because we were the first ones with the fire, but without that sprinkler and those resources, we probably wouldn’t be here today,” she said. 

It’s a different story at a nearby campground, just a two-minute drive away.

A camper van at the campground is completely torched.
A camper van at the campground near Rainbow Lodge was destroyed by the wildfire. (Candice Lipski/CBC)

You can see the outlines of scorched campsites, along with skeletal remains of campers, RVs, bed frames and sinks, surrounded by blackened trees.

Lawrence said she was able to talk with some of the firefighters who helped save the lodge.

“It was great to meet them and give them a hug,” she said.

“It’s hard to know how to pay them back, but we definitely want to go forward and pay it forward.”

WATCH | How a wildfire destroyed the Piprell Lake campground: 

How a wildfire destroyed the Piprell Lake campground

The Piprell Lake campground, northwest of Saskwatchewan’s Narrow Hills Provincial Park, was devastated by the Shoe Fire.

The provincial park is closed for campers this season, but Rainbow Lodge (which sits just outside the park) is open for business.

Lawrence is hoping visitors will still make the trip. Her business depends on it.

A dirt road with burnt forest on either side
The forest along Highway 913 heading east into Narrow Hills Provincial Park was greatly damaged. (Candice Lipski/CBC)

Protecting Prince Albert National Park

Visitors are also welcome at Prince Albert National Park this season.

Dustin Guedo, a vegetation and fire ecologist with Parks Canada, is always thinking about how to protect Waskesiu and the surrounding land. It’s been a dry spring, but rain has brought some relief to the area.

A man stands in front of a water treatment plant with forest and elk in the background
Dustin Guedo of Parks Canada stands in front of Waskesiu’s water treatment plant, which is considered critical infrastructure. (Candice Lipski/CBC)

It’s important to protect sites like the water treatment plant, Guedo said, so they remove anything that could fuel a fire from within 10 metres around the building.

Another measure is the community fuel break, just south of Waskesiu. They created a break in the forest, removing all the conifers, to create a safety zone around the town site.

Two people walk through a wide green field with forest on either side.
Parks Canada’s Dustin Guedo and CBC’s Theresa Kliem walk through a fuel break near Waskesiu. (Candice Lipski/CBC)

In the aftermath of the fires, what stands out is not just what was lost, but how people are coming together to rebuild, support each other and get ready for the next time.

“The last four or five years have been some of the largest wildfire seasons we’ve encountered in Canada,” Guedo said.

“It’s something that we are preparing for every year now.”



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