20 properties potentially at risk from wildfire near Dawson City - Action News
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20 properties potentially at risk from wildfire near Dawson City

Yukon emergency officials say a wildfire near Dawson City has been growing more slowly than expected, but some properties east of the town are still under potential threat.

Coal Creek fire grew more slowly than expected overnight, but evacuation alert remains

Smoke from the Coal Creek wildfire is visible from Rian Lougheed Smith's property near Rock Creek. Smith and other local property owners are under an evacuation alert. (Rian Lougheed Smith)

Yukon emergency officials say a wildfire near Dawson City has been growing more slowlythan expected, but some properties east of the town are still under potential threat.

"There's over 20 different properties and structures that are currently assessed as potentially being at risk from this fire, if conditions push the fire in a certain direction," said DiarmuidO'Donovan, director of Yukon's Emergency Measures Organization, on Wednesday afternoon.

The Coal Creek fire, east of Dawson City, was about 6,500 hectares on Wednesday. It's burning a few kilometres north of the North Klondike Highway, and officials on Tuesday were expecting it to spread toward the highway.

O'Donovan said Wednesday that the fire grew more slowly than expected overnight.

"We'vehad some rain affecting areas under fire at the moment, and that includes the airport, Rock Creek, Henderson Corner and many of the farms in the area. So that was a bit of a bonus," he said.

An evacuation alert issued on Tuesday remains in place for those areas, though.

O'Donovan said fire crews are busy putting structure protection in place for the properties potentially at risk.

"Many of the properties are not actually occupied full time. However, folks that do have property should be aware of the fire."

Preparing for possible evacuation

Rian Lougheed Smith is definitely aware of the fire she figuredit was somewhere between seven and 11 kilometres from her family's farm near Rock Creek and she can see and smell plenty of smoke. Her farm is one of the properties under an evacuation order.

"We've had to think pretty seriously about what we do with our animals and our homeand kind of what stuff we would need to take with us," she said.

"My daughter has packed all of her stuffed animals. I had to talk her down a bit, she wanted to transplant every plant from her garden into pots so we could take it with us."

Lougheed Smith who's also six months pregnant says they have about 70 chickens, turkeys and ducks, along with three dogs at their farm. Part of her family'semergency planning is to figure out how to movethe animals if necessary.

"We're actually slightly more manageable than a lot of other people around us who have goats and cows," she said.

Lougheed Smith says so farthey feel well-supported and well-informed by local fire crews. She said crewscame Tuesday to set up sprinklers and other fire suppression measures around their home.

O'Donovan saidcrews were going door-to-door on Wednesday to ensure that everybody in the affected areas knows what's happening.

"It's a good time for residents in that area to dust off their family emergency kit or household emergency kit," said O'Donovan.

With files from Leonard Linklater and Dave White