A fire burning close to the N.W.T.

-Alberta border has burned seven cabins, according to N.W.T.

Fire. Dana Bowen, a communications planning specialist with N.W.

T. Fire, told CBC the cabins' owners have been notified. Sections of the fire, which has been burning since May, reignited overnight on Aug.

12 and created heavy smoke along the highway. Robert Lamalice, one of the cabin owners, said he thinks the cabins burned on Saturday N.W.

T. artists 'create beautiful things' in the year after Yellowknife's wildfire evacuation Yellowknife evacuated one year ago. Are residents more prepared for the next emergency? Lamalice said his family uses their cabin for hunting and trapping, and they had just renovated it.

"The wind shifted ...

blew east and the fire went toward the highway," he said. "That's when most of our cabins burned." "I lost everything that was there.

" A place of family memories Lamalice said his late uncle's cabin also burned — a place he has been visiting since he was young. "I used to go [there] since I was just a little guy," he said. "It's just such a beautiful place.

" He also said his grandson would go to the cabin with him to set traps. "Now I have to start all over again," he said. Bowen said there haven't been any new fires over the weekend.

But she said it was a hot and dry weekend for most of the territory and "challenging fire weather" is expected over the next 48 hours. "We are still in a severe drought," Bowen said. "There has been some rain, which has b.