Cleanup continues today two days after a wildfire swept across southwestern Saskatchewan.

After a chaotic Tuesday evening for four members of the Swift Current Fire Department, one of them has shared their story.

The crew made it to Burstall by 6 p.m. to help out with the fire and as they started to get closer firefighter Cody Yolland said it was a wild scene.

"At that point, it was an eerie feeling where there were power outages, people fleeing and evacuating from the area," he recalled. "It was a bit of a chaotic area, but at the same token it was also very organized from the Burstall Fire Department standpoint and how they were arranging all the mutual aid."

Upon arriving in the community of approximately 300 people, the crew, along with their tanker, was sent to a nearby farmyard a couple miles south of town to protect the farmyard and make sure the fire didn't make it to a few propane tanks in the immediate area.

"It looked like it was snowing out, but just black ashes blowing all over the place," Yolland said. "It was just a really weird feeling. I would describe it as living hell. It was all black but you'd see rows of fence lines that were burnt, the ditches had embers burning in them and there were vehicles in the ditches that were abandoned."

Yolland also added they could only see a few feet in front of the truck while in the Burstall area so they could only travel around five kilometres an hour.