Close X
Monday, December 2, 2024
ADVT 
National

'The Smell Is Atrocious': Fish Flies Ankle-deep In Manitoba Town

The Canadian Press, 14 Jul, 2016 12:56 PM
    GIMLI, Man. — Mounds of ankle-deep fish flies are piling up in the Manitoba town of Gimli where town workers are scooping them with shovels and filling dozens of garbage bags at a time.
     
    Park patrol supervisor Gibby Finnbogason says the town on the shore of Lake Winnipeg is used to the regular mid-July visit from the fish flies — but this year is different.
     
    He says easterly winds have carried the insects into the town in droves, covering sidewalks and the boardwalk by the beach.
     
    "Traditionally, you will see them in mounds on the ground but we're not used to seeing them in quite the large amounts that we're seeing them right now," he says.
     
    "On Monday morning, we bagged 42 (garbage) bags of fish flies and that was just the high areas on the boardwalk on the beach."
     
    He says the flies only live for 24 hours and give off an "atrocious" smell once they die.
     
    "It smells like a rotting carcass of a fish," Finnbogason says. "Especially when they are wet, it's even worse."
     
    They look similar to a dragonfly, except without a mouth, and cling to any surface they can find — from windows and cars to people's clothing.
     
    "When I'm done my shift, I'll have anywhere from five to 50 of them attached to my body. They're all over the place."
     
    They are virtually impossible to avoid when walking down the street, crunching underfoot.
     
    "They make quite an awful sound," he says. "You can just hear the crunching of the carcasses under your feet as you walk and you get the smell along with that. It's quite the experience."
     
    With both the town's annual film festival and Icelandic festival looming, Finnbogason says hopes are high the flies will disappear soon.
     
    "People will be happy that fish flies will be just a bad memory by the time those events come to Gimli."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Women's Coalition Gets Status At Hearing Into Judge's Sex Assault Comments

    Women's Coalition Gets Status At Hearing Into Judge's Sex Assault Comments
    A Canadian Judicial Council inquiry scheduled for September is to determine whether Justice Robin Camp should be removed from his job.

    Women's Coalition Gets Status At Hearing Into Judge's Sex Assault Comments

    Online Ad Featuring Stolen Tractor Leads Alberta RCMP To Suspects

    Online Ad Featuring Stolen Tractor Leads Alberta RCMP To Suspects
    Mounties say the tractor worth $25,000 was stolen from a Stettler-area equipment dealer last Monday and the ad showed up the next day.

    Online Ad Featuring Stolen Tractor Leads Alberta RCMP To Suspects

    Hunters Say Elk Populations Fall In Southeastern B.C., But Hunting Ban Opposed

    Hunters Say Elk Populations Fall In Southeastern B.C., But Hunting Ban Opposed
    The president of the East Kootenay Hunters Association, Larry Hall, says the province must do more to protect elk and moose.

    Hunters Say Elk Populations Fall In Southeastern B.C., But Hunting Ban Opposed

    High-Risk Offender, Halfway House Resident Wanted By Vancouver Police Turns Himself In

    High-Risk Offender, Halfway House Resident Wanted By Vancouver Police Turns Himself In
    VANCOUVER — A man wanted on a Canada-wide warrant is back in police custody after turning himself into RCMP in Surrey, B.C.

    High-Risk Offender, Halfway House Resident Wanted By Vancouver Police Turns Himself In

    Police Search Toy Poodle Stolen From Burnaby, B.C., Parking Lot

    Police Search Toy Poodle Stolen From Burnaby, B.C., Parking Lot
    BURNABY, B.C. — Police in Burnaby, B.C., are searching for a dog-napper after a toy poodle was taken from a parking lot.

    Police Search Toy Poodle Stolen From Burnaby, B.C., Parking Lot

    Warm Weather, Not Stampede, Leads To Increase In Sexual Assaults: Advocate

    Warm Weather, Not Stampede, Leads To Increase In Sexual Assaults: Advocate
    CALGARY — The Calgary Stampede has developed a reputation for parties, hookups and general debauchery over the years, but that doesn't equate to an increase in the number of reported sexual assaults, says a women's advocate.

    Warm Weather, Not Stampede, Leads To Increase In Sexual Assaults: Advocate