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This is Victor, Alpha 3 Victor, Whiskey X-ray 4ID. All right, we've had a few things come in. I was gonna mention the fires, since that's been pretty important. I know there are people who've been asking about that. So the fire situation for Canada, this is over the course of the last week. British Columbia, they've seen a doubling in the number of active fires in the past week. The National Prepareless Level federally is at a level five for the whole country. That's the highest level, and basically that means that there's a full commitment of national assets, and international assistance is also being mobilized to help with it. So there's basically an extreme demand for firefighting resources, so that's pretty high. Okay, back to BC. The Wesley Ridge Fire, that was north of Nanaimo on Vancouver Island. That fire's grown and it's basically out of control. Last I checked, the Cantilever Bar Wildfire, that's near Liddon, and that blaze is causing poor quality in the Fraser Canyon and surrounding regions. Bear Creek Wildfire, that was on the east side of Harrison Lake, and that's led to road closures in the recreation area. And then when you look at Saskatchewan, they're provincially at a preparedness level five, so it's very, that's the highest it can get. And they have a number of massive fires as well. Let me cycle up. One fire, it's enormous. This is Lower Fishing Lake. This fire is estimated at over 554,000 hectares. That's massive. La Ronge, that's another one that's at about 207,000 hectares and north of Weyakwin, and that fire's estimated at 192,000 hectares, so those are the three biggest fires right now in Saskatchewan, huge. And that's of course, people always think Saskatchewan is prairie and wheat and flat, yes it is, but northern Saskatchewan is very rugged and it's a different world, right? Very different from the southern half. It goes from prairie land into heavy forest. Manitoba, they're also obviously at a five. The big fire there, Snow Lake, that one's 28,000 hectares, so excuse me, 28,000 hectares, and Leaf Rapids, that one's 73,000 hectares. Alberta, they're at a preparedness level four, so they're doing a little bit better than some of the other provinces, but they have a number of new wildfires. There's one burning near Lac La Biche, Fort McMurray, and they have some smaller ones that are ongoing, but those are sort of the big ones. And as far as evacuations go, Little Coquitlam River Village, as well as the Wesley Ridge wildfire on Vancouver Island, so there are evacuation orders in effect for those communities in the north side of Cameron Lake, and the Lytton First Nation in BC is also being evacuated. This is repeater station kilo, kilo seven, November to Quebec November. There are a number of evacuation alerts, but that means you're ready to evacuate. That doesn't necessarily mean you've gotta go. The ones I just mentioned were the orders where get out of the way, things aren't looking good, so not great. And of course, needless to say, the smoke, the air quality is up and down, it's hit and miss. It just depends on the way the wind's blowing and what it's doing, right, what the fire's doing, the way the wind's blowing. So it's been, today for example, it was a wonderful day, 25, I think got up to 27 degrees Celsius here in Toronto, but the sky had that bit of a reddish hue to it because of the high level smoke. We were okay at ground level, but the smoke was way up in the sky versus the day before. The sky was this crisp blue color because there was no smoke. So it comes and it goes, and obviously the closer you are to fires, you can have other effects such as ash fall, things like that. We're not having that in Eastern Canada per se, but in Western Canada and the North, that's far more common.

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