Out of sandbags: Floodwaters threaten this Haliburton County town

Major flooding is impacting the township of Minden Hills, Ont., prompting officials to begin preparing for possible evacuations and impactful closures.

Warm temperatures and heavy rains have created major troubles for the township of Minden Hills, Ont., in Haliburton County. The township declared a state of emergency on Tuesday as water levels on the Gull River, which runs through town, exceeded the riverbanks, causing major flooding to several roads throughout the community.

The flooding is also threatening a critical bridge that runs through town, connecting residents on either side of the river. Officials will announce later Friday whether or not to close the bridge for safety, which would cut off many residents from half of the town. This, along with other road closures from the flooding, could turn what would normally be a 5 to 10 minute commute across town into a 1+ hour commute, as well as cut off half of the community from emergency services.

River waters reaching dangerously close to the bridge that connects half of Minden to the other half. (Victoria Fenn Alvarado/TWN)

The water level is reaching dangerously close to the bridge that connects half of Minden to the other half. If the water reaches 8-feet high, officials may close the bridge. (Victoria Fenn Alvarado/TWN)

Volunteers throughout the community have been stepping up to fill sandbags in an effort to contain the flooding and mitigate the impacts. With some folks working in 10 hour shifts since Tuesday, all 25,000 sandbags available were filled by Friday morning.

An evacuation centre is also being prepared at the local community centre. Once open in the coming days, it will provide food and shelter for anyone displaced by the floods.

Floodwaters in Minden Hills, Ont., on April 17, 2026 (Victoria Fenn Alvarado/TWN)

Floodwaters in Minden Hills, Ont., on April 17, 2026 (Victoria Fenn Alvarado/TWN)

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Looking ahead at Minden's forecast

Conditions are expected to stay dry on Friday, which should hopefully help give the ground time to absorb some of the floodwater. Saturday, however, we'll see a strong cold front move through in the afternoon, bringing another 10-20 mm of rain to the area.

On top of the additional rainfall, temperatures will also drop to near-freezing on Saturday.

Luckily, the long-range pattern looks to cut off the moisture-laden storms from the U.S. A few clippers are expected to move through, but with less precipitation and longer breaks in between the rounds of active weather. All in all, next week is so far looking to be drier, but temperatures will stay chilly and below normal.

Stay tuned to The Weather Network for live updates on the flooding in Minden as the situation continues to unfold.

WATCH: Town of Minden preps evacuation centre during ongoing flooding