Wildfire in southern N.S. occurred amid some of driest recorded conditions: scientist
HALIFAX — A federal scientist with the Canadian Forest Service is pointing to the driest conditions since the Second World War as a key factor behind the largest wildfire in Nova Scotia in the past century.
Sylvie Gauthier said in an interview Friday a review of records indicates the 235-square-kilometre fire in Barrington Lake that swept over bogs, fields and woodlands in southern Nova Scotia had the fourth highest rating for dryness of the woods since 1900, and the highest since 1944.
The province’s Department of Natural Resources says the fire, which forced 6,000 evacuations and destroyed 60 houses and cottages, was Nova Scotia’s largest wildfire since the early 1920s when it began keeping records.
Gauthier said the measurement of the dryness of the fuel in the forests is referred to as a “drought code,” and is a component of the Canadian forest fire behaviour system.


