Friday, December 19, 2025
ADVT 
National

Wildfire Doubles In Size In Southern B.C.

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 06 Aug, 2019 08:01 PM
  • Wildfire Doubles In Size In Southern B.C.

VANCOUVER - The BC Wildfire Service says a fire burning in British Columbia's southern Interior doubled in size over a 24-hour period to about 2.5 square kilometres.

 

More than 100 people, supported by aircraft and heavy equipment, are battling the blaze that broke out Aug. 4 north of Oliver.

 

The fire activity had calmed late Monday, but that could change as Environment Canada forecasts the heat will remain in the low- to mid-30s through the week, with no rain forecast until Saturday.

 

An evacuation alert prompted by the fire was issued Monday by the Regional District of Okanagan-Similkameen which covers 206 properties north of Oliver.

 

Steep and rocky terrain is complicating firefighting efforts and the wildfire service says a structure protection specialist and incident management team are at the scene.

 

Cool and damp conditions in July kept a lid on the wildfire risk across B.C.

 

The wildfire service says a suspected lightning-caused blaze discovered Sunday in northwestern B.C., has already charred 44 square kilometres of timber west of Telegraph Creek.

 

No structures are threatened and the flames are believed to be spreading slowly to the east, but a social media post from the service says smoke is highly visible in Telegraph Creek, nearly 50 kilometres to the east.

 

Twenty-one homes in that community were destroyed by a wildfire last year that razed more than 12-hundred square kilometres of bush and forced an evacuation that continued for 102 days.

 

The wildfire service still lists that blaze as a "wildfire of note" because of extreme drought conditions in the region and the potential for flames that smouldered underground over the winter to erupt again as another hot spell arrives.

 

Anyone conducting activity in the Cassiar Fire Zone, which includes the area west of Telegraph Creek where the current large blaze is burning, should use extreme caution, says the online post from the wildfire service.

 

Just under 600 wildfires have been recorded in B.C. since the wildfire season began on April 1, with 29 currently active.

 

This time last year, there had been 1,468 fires recorded across the province, the fire service says.

 

The service says 57 per cent of the 2019 wildfires were human-caused, while lightening is blamed for the remainder.

MORE National ARTICLES

Second-Degree Murder Charge Laid Against Surrey, B.C., Man In February Slaying

Second-Degree Murder Charge Laid Against Surrey, B.C., Man In February Slaying
A statement from the Integrated Homicide Investigation Team says 26-year-old Pee Lee Pi of Surrey was arrested July 12 and charged with the second-degree murder of 68-year-old Tee Bor.

Second-Degree Murder Charge Laid Against Surrey, B.C., Man In February Slaying

Tories Ask CSIS To Probe Ex-ambassador's Comments About Advice To China

OTTAWA - Conservative MPs want Canada's intelligence agency to probe whether a former Canadian ambassador is encouraging China to interfere in the upcoming federal election.    

Tories Ask CSIS To Probe Ex-ambassador's Comments About Advice To China

Hot Food, BBQs, Banned In B.C. Park As Momma Bear Sniffs Out Picnics

Hot Food, BBQs, Banned In B.C. Park As Momma Bear Sniffs Out Picnics
Effective immediately, all hot food and any type of cooking or barbecuing is banned in Coquitlam's Mundy Park.

Hot Food, BBQs, Banned In B.C. Park As Momma Bear Sniffs Out Picnics

Timeline: The Wrongful Murder Conviction Of Glen Assoun Of Halifax

Timeline: The Wrongful Murder Conviction Of Glen Assoun Of Halifax
 Nov. 12, 1995: Brenda Way — known as "Pitt Bull" — was murdered and her body left in a parking lot behind a Dartmouth apartment building sometime in the early morning hours.

Timeline: The Wrongful Murder Conviction Of Glen Assoun Of Halifax

Trudeau Visits Alberta Pipeline Site, Says National Unity Is Not Under Threat

Trudeau Visits Alberta Pipeline Site, Says National Unity Is Not Under Threat
EDMONTON - Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is dismissing claims by conservative politicians that national unity is under threat.

Trudeau Visits Alberta Pipeline Site, Says National Unity Is Not Under Threat

'I Saw A Trailer That Was All Twisted': Tornado Tosses Quebec Campground

'I Saw A Trailer That Was All Twisted': Tornado Tosses Quebec Campground
"When I drove through, I saw a trailer that was all twisted, up in the air," said Andre Parent, a Montrealer who lives at the Camping Horizon campground in summer.

'I Saw A Trailer That Was All Twisted': Tornado Tosses Quebec Campground