Avalon's exploration camp converted to base for fire crews - Action News
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Avalon's exploration camp converted to base for fire crews

This week, Avalon's Nechalacho exploration site is more than a mining operation. It's also a fire base camp to fight a nearby forest fire.

Fire crews battling small fire near Blachford Lake

About 21 firefighters from Whitehorse and Carcross, Yukon were at the Nechalacho base camp east of Yellowknife on Wednesday, fighting flare-ups at a nearby forest fire. Officials expect them to continue this work for another two days. (Alyssa Mosher/CBC)

Avalon's NWTNechalacho exploration site is more than a mining operation.It's become a base camp fora crew from Yukon fighting a nearby forest fire.

The camp is 100 kilometres east of Yellowknife, near Blachford Lake Lodge.Afire in the area started July 21.

"I've never seen a group of harder working people in all my life," says Chris Pederson, the site manager at Nechalacho, who offered thesite to the crew from Yukon.

"I just said this would be a perfect fire base for them."

Avalon already has places to sleep, float planes to transport gear and a trailer the crew uses a kitchen.

Jack Bird, with the Department of Environment and Natural Resources,helps manage the firefighters.He says crews kept the fire to a little more than twokilometressquare.

A water hose leads out of Thor Lake at the Nechalacho mining exploration site, about 100 kilometres outside Yellowknife. (Alyssa Mosher/CBC)

"Which is very huge accomplishment in these burning conditions right now."

Bird has been working with Avalon and the owners of Blachford Lake Lodge,telling them how to keep fire away from their properties.

Avalon also wants to protect its $40millionworth of rock samples.They're stored outside in wooden containers at thesite.It isconsidering bulldozing trees around the property's perimeter and installing sprinklers on top of the drill core.

"If a fire went through it, you'd just have a heap of core on the ground. You wouldn't know what holes they were from or anything like that. Knowing exactly where the drill core comes from is critical...I mean, we don't want to losethe camp, but a camp is almost replaceable and the drill core is almost irreplaceable," saidBill Mercer, Avalon'svicepresident of exploration.

The fire closest to the property is nearly out.

The crew from Yukon is expected to finish mopping up the fire by Saturday.