Fort McMurray exodus: Convoy of evacuees get 1st glimpse of fire-ravaged city - Action News
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Edmonton

Fort McMurray exodus: Convoy of evacuees get 1st glimpse of fire-ravaged city

Friday's convoy ride through the still-smoking heart of Fort McMurray was "like driving through a war zone," Marisa Heath said, with whole streets of her hometown burned to cinders.

By 3 p.m. MT Friday, about 1,200 vehicles had moved through Fort McMurray, with many more to follow

Fort McMurray convoy from above

8 years ago
Duration 0:51
Drone aerial footage shows the scope of what evacuees and fire crews are up against

With whole streetsof her hometown burned to cinders,Friday's convoy ridethrough the still-smokingheart of Fort McMurraywas, Marisa Heath said, "like driving through a war zone."

"My heart was breaking," saidHeath, who was among the first evacuees to see the devastation up close, asconvoy after convoy rolled slowly downHighway 63, headed south through the city toward an uncertain future.
Marisa Heath made the sad highway run through Fort McMurray on Friday with her husband, two dogs, a cat and seven kittens. (CBC)

"It was nothing but burnt everywhere," said Heath, who travelled with her husband,Darren, along with two dogs, a cat andseven kittens. "It was devastating to see it."

For hundreds of evacuees thousandsby day's end Friday's convoys offered thefirst chance to seethe burned ruins of a city they had fled just 72 hours earlier.

After three days stranded in oilsandsworkcamps north of the city,thousands of evacuees in cars and trucks wereescorted through their fire-ravaged community, with RCMPcruisersin front and behind.They travelled in groups of 50 vehicles at a time, with helicopters on watch overhead. All intersections along the route were blocked by policeto ensure no one triedto slip away and disappear into the haze.

To watchers, the convoysmay havelooked something like funeral processions. When the convoysreached the city, one of the first neighbourhoods they passed was Thickwood, up the hillon the right, where most homes were untouched by the fire.
The first convoy of fire evacuees began to roll just after dawn on Friday. Trevor Wilson (CBC)

The convoyscrossed the Grant MacEwan Bridge over the Athabasca River, where down to the left wasMacDonald Island Park, where the city had set up an evacuation centre early in the week, before that, too, was finally evacuated.

On south they went, with the hills around Abasand to the right and the downtown core to the left.

Then, climbing the hill out of the river valley, theypassed Beacon Hill, where hundreds of homes were lost.

Atop the hill they passed the ruined hulk of the Super 8 Motel, and a Shell station and a trailer park that burned to ashes.

South of the airport, once they cleared the fire zone, each convoy wasreleased by police, and from there people were free to continue their journeysto Edmonton or to Calgary, where they will be housed in evacuationcentres or bunk with family or friends.

By 3 p.m. Friday, about 1,200vehicles had moved through the city.Many more will follow.

In all, about 25,000 residents had been stranded north of Fort McMurray after the city was evacuated on Tuesday. Many were shelteredin work camps owned byoilsands companies.

Premier Rachel Notleysaid about 7,000 of those people left Thursday on flights that took off from oil company runways near two of the camps. The province hoped to fly another 5,500 people out on Friday.

"We've all seen the heartbreaking images taken by citizens travelling through Fort McMurray today," Notley saidlater in the day. "And there is no doubt the damage is extensive and will take many months to repair."

For Heath, the drive through Fort McMurray and on toWandering River was, she said, almost like "living in hell, and then being upgraded to heaven.

"It was so nice to see the leaves on the trees," she said, "and the green grass."

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With files from the CBC's Marion Warnica