As hundreds of wildfires burn around B.C. and people scramble to get away, Deanna Bell was thinking about the animals.
Bell, who is a registered massage therapist up in Houston, was talking with one of her clients about all the wild animals fleeing the fires.
“The magnitude has been unfathomable. There’s the three large fires that are circling everybody,” she told Black Press Media by phone Sunday.
“I thought, that’s great that all the wildlife can get away but what about everything that’s behind a fence? All the horse, all the cows… I’m an animal lover.”
So Bell set out to see what she could do to help.
Turns out, quite a bit.
She called the Regional District of Bulkley-Nechako who told her that anyone with farm status was already able to apply for help.
But that left behind a lot of people.
“There’s two qualifications: you either have farm status or you’re considered a hobbyist,” said Bell.
“Around the south side of Burns Lake, everybody has three chickens, four dogs, a pig, a goat and an alpaca.”
Evacuated horses enjoy some peace and quiet. (Northwest Forest Fires Support Network) |
It’s that random assortment of animals that Bell, along with her mother Jocelyn, has set out to help.
At first, it seemed almost too much to handle
“So as the days continued and we began coordinating, it became a monster,” said Bell ruefully.
“I have 30 pages of handwritten notes and emails and text messages.”
So on the advice of a friend, she set up the Northwest Forest Fire Support Network page on Facebook and a matching GoFundMe that was only $180 short of its $10,000 goal on Sunday afternoon.
For locals, there is a donation account set up at the Bulkley Valley Credit Union.
“So instead of having a paper copy, I was getting everyone on my list to post on there,” Bell said.
“It wasn’t just me being the middleman. The public had access.”
READ MORE: B.C. residents defy evacuation orders as wildfires burn
So far, between Bell handling the larger animals and Jason Jubinville from P & B Feeds in Burns Lake, who is handling the smaller ones, they’ve relocated 1,200 animals.
In total, Bell thinks that there’s around 9,000 cows, sheep, goats and pigs on hobby farms in evacuation alert areas.
Although it’s a gargantuan task, Bell said the community has stepped up to help.
“One lady messages me and says ‘I don’t have money, I don’t have a place for animals but I’m going to go to all my neighbours and collect all their fruit,” said Bell.
But hay is expensive. The $10,000 GoFundMe goal will only pay for two liner-loads of hay.
“It’s super expensive but if everybody just threw in $20…”