Covering the drought in southwestern Nova Scotia - Action News
Home WebMail Wednesday, November 13, 2024, 04:15 AM | Calgary | -1.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Nova ScotiaREPORTER'S NOTEBOOK

Covering the drought in southwestern Nova Scotia

CBC News anchor Tom Murphy describes how in a few minutes, the water levels at a southwestern Nova Scotia river went from being remarkably low to being deep enough to almost carry away the crew's equipment.

A live hit at the Jordan River in southwestern Nova Scotia went awry on Thursday night

Low water levels in some southwestern Nova Scotia rivers are leaving some rivers to look like this at low tide. (CBC)

If you want an example of just how low water levels are in Shelburne County, look at the rivers.Any of them.The driest summer since the 1880s has left the rocks on rivers such as the Roseway, Tigney and Jordan baking in the unrelenting sun.

That is, as we would learn the hard way, until the tide turns.

Earlier this week,I hosted the evening newscastfrom the Jordan River.Camera operator Eric Woolliscroft spotted the waterway early in the day.It was shocking to see just a trickle of water where usually there would be more of a torrent, but such is life in this part of the province these days.

Wells,springs, streams and rivers are chokingas a result of having only received about one-third of the rainfall theynormally receive.

In a matter of minutes from when this photo was taken, the once-dry soles of CBC News Nova Scotia co-host Tom Murphy's shoes were underwater. (Eric Woolliscroft/CBC)

The Jordan River was to be our live backdrop to help tell that story.

We spent the day tracking down well digging companies and contractors.They are criss-crossing southwestern Nova Scotia, working long days, in what has been one of their busiest summers.

The relief they bring to people when they pull up with their trucks and excavators is evident.The anxiety homeowners feel, who have struggled for weeks to get water for their everyday needs, quickly drains away faster than the water in their wells has.

No time to reposition

We gathered that story and met our satellite truck where Highway 103 meets the Jordan River.It was still pretty low at this point, so we beavered away at preparing our material to be fed via satellite to Halifax.

A few minutes prior to 6 p.m.,I assumed my position in front of the camera on those exposed rocks in the Jordan River. The river was definitely higher, but we were committed. The show was about to air and there was no time to reposition.

Measuring the amount of water in one's well has become a worrisome, daily practice for many southwestern Nova Scotia residents because of the dry summer the province has endured. (CBC)

After our reports on welldigging in Shelburne and a story on the dry weather's impacts on farming in the Annapolis Valley from CBC reporterPaul Palmeter, I "threw back" as we say in the business to co-host Amy Smith in the dry studio in Halifax.

What the audience did not see is the calamity that followed.

In those short few minutes we were on the air, the tide beganto fill that section of the Jordan River.The once-dry soles of my shoes were now underwater.My camera operatorwas up to his ankles.The cable connecting us to the satellite was underwater.And still the tide water was coming.Fast.

'Mayday' call

I grabbed a lighting box and rushed to the river bank.Eric made a "mayday" call to our satellite truck operator, David Laughlin, who grabbed the camera.While we hurriedly repositioned for ournext appearance on the program, he fished the tripod to safety from the now rapidly flowing river.

The irony here, of course, is this: We are a province surrounded by waterand yet great swathes of Nova Scotia are dry, thirsty for potable water.

People here inShelburne County hopethat like the tide, the days of well water they can count on will once again return quickly.