
Image: istockphoto.com/Julie Kendall
The fire, known as Thunder Bay 37, was expected to reach 10,000 hectares in size.
A group of 130 firefighters from British Columbia arrived in Thunder Bay, Ont., Sunday night to help battle the flames along with a number of other fires in the region.
As of Sunday, the Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources reported 13 active fires in the region, including Thunder Bay 37, the fire that jumped the border from Minnesota into Ontario last week.
Bob Thomas, a spokesman with Ontario's Ministry of Natural Resources, said most of the newcomers would be deployed to the big fire.
A single millimetre of rain fell Sunday night.
"It's a start," Thomas said on Monday.
"There is a chance of more rain in the forecast for today and into tonight, but it could be a mixed blessing in the sense that there could be some lightning thrown in with it."
As many as 300 people, mostly cottagers, have been evacuated from the fire's path while a few hundred more are on alert.
Thanks to cooler temperatures and dying winds, a second fire, this one just 50 kilometres north of Thunder Bay, has responded to attempts to knock it down.
The fire grew rapidly Sunday and by late afternoon, covered 1,000 hectares.
Thomas called it a "contentious" fire.
"It is also in a very heavy recreation use area," he said.
Officials were concerned they would have to close down the Armstrong Highway, which runs from Lake Superior to the community of Armstrong on the west side of Lake Nipigon, but that wasn't needed.
Only eight cottagers had to be evacuated and it was expected they would be allowed to go back Monday.
Thomas said fire crews appeared to have a handle on that fire.
"Our batting average so far this spring hasn't been great, so it's nice to get one," he said.





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