Crews battling a 215-square-kilometre wildfire near Fort St. John in northeastern British Columbia got some unexpected help in the fight.
Hannah Swift, an information officer with the BC Wildfire Service, said the amount of smoke in the area was enough to provide a buffer from the sun’s heat, which had been expected to cause problems for crews at the Stoddart Creek blaze and others nearby.
“That actually helps because the fire behaviour is not as active when it doesn’t have the direct solar heat on it,” Ms. Swift said Thursday.
It was a happy medium, she said, because smoke also dissipated enough for the service to launch helicopters to support crews on the ground.
The fire burning about 25 kilometres from Fort St. John is not believed to have grown substantially in the last 24 hours, she said.
The forecast suggests possible rain over the weekend, although Ms. Swift said there’s also potential for thunderstorms, which could bring lightning.
The City of Fort St. John lifted an evacuation alert Wednesday that had put the community of about 21,000 residents on edge since Monday, while more than 1,300 properties in the surrounding area remain under an evacuation order.
The wildfire service’s website lists 60 active wildfires in B.C.
Officials have issued a ban on large open burning across the province in an effort to prevent human-caused wildfires.
Under B.C.’s fire ban designations, Category 2 and 3 open burning are prohibited.
That includes large open fires, other than a campfire, that burn material in one or more piles not exceeding two metres in height and three metres in width, as well as burning stubble or grass that doesn’t exceed 0.2 hectares.
The wildfire service has reported that 42 wildfires so far this year were human-caused, while 15 were started by lightning and three had unknown causes.
The service also announced that, starting Friday at noon, all open fires, including campfires, will be prohibited throughout the Prince George Fire Centre, where all four out-of-control wildfires in the province are located.
Campfires elsewhere in the province have to be confined to 0.5 metres in height and 0.5 metres in diameter.
“Open burning can be a useful tool when conducted responsibly and only while it is permitted. If conducted irresponsibly or in unsafe conditions, the potential of a human-caused wildfire increases,” the service said on Twitter last month.