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Fire in Ladysmith harbour destroys float home

A woman was out on Tuesday night when a blaze gutted her float home in Ladysmith harbour, according to emergency officials.
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A float home burns off Slag Point in Ladysmith on Tuesday night.


A woman was out on Tuesday night when a blaze gutted her float home in Ladysmith harbour, according to emergency officials.

The fire broke out shortly before 8 p.m. at the two storey wooden shingled dwelling docked in an area of the harbour just off Slag Point, near Transfer Beach.

Smoke was still billowing up in the sky from debris early Wednesday morning as a large piece of charred dock with a burned out stove sizzled on shore.

Nearby on the beach rested a steel boat that the woman was known to use to get to land, where residents often saw her cleaning up garbage.

Ladysmith Fire Chief Ray Delcourt said all 24 volunteer firefighters were on scene assisting until after midnight.

“By the time we got down there it was fully involved,” he said.

A couple of firefighters joined the Canadian Coast Guard Station Ganges on its vessel but the efforts were no match for the fire.

Delcourt said the best they could do was to cool down areas where there was fuel.

“As far as our response, we just don’t have any capability to move water out there,” Delcourt said.  “If a vessel is burning out the middle of the harbour we can’t go out and board that vessel....we have to make sure we’re safe out there.”

The Coast Guard and Ladysmith RCMP couldn’t immediately be reached for comment on if they are investigating the cause of the fire.

Police where able to make contact with the woman at around midnight.  Her home is not insured.

Royal Canadian Marine Search & Rescue Station #29 Ladysmith was also on scene with its boat Community Spirit and assisted with transporting firefighters.

“I think that a fortunate thing was that the wind was blowing from the north and so the smoke was going toward the uninhabited part of the Slag Point,” said John Davis, president of the Ladysmith & District Marine Rescue Society.

“Bits of pieces of burning debris that broke off from the dock drifted in that direction instead of into other boats. There weren’t hazards to other vessels or to the all the infrastructure of the community marina so that was good.”

Coast Guard officials were on scene at Slag Point Wednesday morning after the fire assessing the harbour for any fuel sheen.

Several residents reported hearing explosions which Fire Rescue believes could have been a compressed gas cylinder.

“There was the odd bit of bang or boom but that could have just been a bit of fuel set aside,” Delcourt said.





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