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Sandpoint Beach fencing

Sandpoint Beach fencing

CTV News4 hours ago

Windsor Watch
Fencing going up to block all access to Sandpoint Beach. CTV Windsor's Bob Bellacicco explains.

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Wildfire evacuees continue returning home in Manitoba, Saskatchewan
Wildfire evacuees continue returning home in Manitoba, Saskatchewan

Globe and Mail

timean hour ago

  • Globe and Mail

Wildfire evacuees continue returning home in Manitoba, Saskatchewan

Wildfire evacuees continued to make their way home in some Manitoba communities Tuesday, but there were hurdles. Tataskweyak Cree Nation lifted its evacuation order Monday evening, then told the community's 2,400 residents Tuesday morning the return was being delayed due to problems with the water system. 'Water tests came back (with) high aluminum. The pipes and reservoir will need to be cleaned and samples taken after the cleaning,' said a message posted on the chief and council's Facebook page. An evacuation order also was lifted Tuesday for the dozens of evacuees from Bissett, near the Manitoba-Ontario boundary. They were forced out last month by a wildfire near Nopiming Provincial Park. Where in Canada are there wildfire smoke warnings? Our map tracks air quality across the country Residents in Flin Flon, one of the largest communities evacuated, were still waiting for the fire threat to diminish before they could be allowed to return. An out-of-control fire covering roughly 3,700 square kilometres continued to burn north and east of the city of 5,000 people. Manitoba's latest report said crews were battling 18 fires, eight of which were out of control. At the peak of evacuations, about 21,000 residents were out of their homes, putting pressure on the province's supply of hotel rooms and prompting Premier Wab Kinew's government to encourage tourists to reconsider Manitoba travel plans. A third of those evacuees came from the Pimicikamak Cree Nation in the north-central region. They have started returning home, as are residents in Snow Lake, Sherridon and Herb Lake Landing. Rain and cooler temperatures have brought relief to both Manitoba and Saskatchewan in recent days, allowing fire bans to be reduced and more evacuees to go home. In Saskatchewan, the province reported 13 active fires, with three out of control. Saskatchewan Public Safety Minister Tim McLeod said Monday that people across 34 communities were in the process of returning.

Southern Alberta grasshopper population size dampened by rain
Southern Alberta grasshopper population size dampened by rain

CTV News

time3 hours ago

  • CTV News

Southern Alberta grasshopper population size dampened by rain

Farmers in southern Alberta are hopeful that rainfall has helped put a damper on grasshopper population sizes this year. A group of grasshoppers has the ability to wipe out a field of crops if they're not taken care of. While grasshopper outbreaks can be spotty, farmers know all too well the damage they can cause. 'Grasshoppers, they can totally decimate a crop. They can eat it almost right to the ground. So, it seems like if there's a few, there's a lot. And when there's a lot, they can do a lot of damage. Unless you get control of them right away,' said Sean Stanford, a farmer from Magrath, Alta. Grasshoppers flourish in hot and dry conditions like southern Alberta has seen this spring. But what rain the region has seen could help to keep the population down. 'They started hatching in mid-May, so it's a little bit early, and then they were clipped off by rain, and then they started hatching again and clipped off by that second good rain,' said Dan Johnson, a grasshopper expert and professor at the University of Lethbridge. 'A lot of places around southern Alberta had nine or 10 millimetres on about June 12 or so, so that wiped out a number of them.' Timely rain has kept the population at an average size. Any additional rain at this point won't stop more from hatching but can keep grasshopper numbers down. 'They're mostly in the older stages now, and they could probably take the rain, but when it rains, it's cool and they don't grow. They just wait it out. And the longer they wait it out … the lower survival they have,' said Johnson. While the population may not be significantly larger than last year. Farmers will still have to be on their toes. They'll do everything from spraying pesticides when there's an outbreak to more preventative measures. 'It seems like they overwinter in the ditches and the tall grass and things like that's where they get their eggs laid. So, if you can somehow keep your ditch grass shorter, that seems to be a help, because they seem to move in from the outsides of the field towards the middle,' said Stanford. The 2024 provincial grasshopper survey notes egg-laying conditions were ideal last fall. That means there's still a chance for large outbreaks to occur.

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