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CA2 days ago

West Kelowna wildfire considered ‘held’ after forcing evacuations

A wildfire in West Kelowna, British Columbia, has been contained following the evacuation of approximately 800 residents from 357 properties. The fire, which burned near Kalamoir Park, was initially out of control but is now reported to be 'held' within its current perimeter. Evacuation alerts remain in effect for additional properties in the area.

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An excerpt from ‘Wild Fire: Dispatches from a Country Ablaze,’ a new book that documents how supercharged fire seasons are straining firefighting resources.

Jesse Winter Today The Tyee

Jesse Winter is an award-winning photographer and writer currently based in Vancouver, B.C. His work has appeared in the Guardian, the Globe and Mail, the Toronto Star, the National Post and elsewhere.

[Editor’s note: On Thursday, The Tyee published an interview with photojournalist Jesse Winter about his new book ‘Wild Fire: Dispatches from a Country Ablaze.’ In this excerpt, Winter describes how one crew became trapped inside a raging wildfire while fighting the Adams Lake fire in B.C.’s Shuswap region in 2023.]

By 8:25 p.m., the fire was burning freely in the Scotch Creek valley. Two minutes later, it consumed a wide section of the power line corridor and began spreading vigorously. With the situation deteriorating rapidly, command ordered everyone off the line. But as the crews prepared to evacuate, the fire cut across their only known route to safety.

Frantically, helicopter co-ordinator Ingham scanned her maps again. The ground crews desperately needed a new way out. Luckily, Ingham spotted one. A spur road cut across the mountainside south of the firefighters and eventually joined with the Lee Creek forest service road. But to reach it, they would have to drive off-road, navigating around spreading spot fires and over ditches. It would be a pell-mell race to reach safety before the fire caught up to them.

In the chaos, Coast Zulu’s crew leader realized that some of the Brazilian firefighters were not receiving the message to evacuate. Rather than head for the newly identified escape route, the Brazilians were driving the wrong way back towards the now-escaping fire itself. One Coast Zulu crew member jumped out of their IA truck and sprinted ahead, down the rough road, through swirling smoke and embers. They knew that, at this point, they could run faster than their trucks could drive. They flagged down the Brazilian crews and passed the message to evacuate. Then they sprinted back to their truck.

Finally, with a convoy of trucks organized, firefighters began making their way back towards their evacuation point, only to find it cut off by flames. To reach the secondary evacuation route, they were forced to drive off-road through bushes and trees. As they drove over a steep embankment, one truck kicked up onto two wheels, nearly rolling over. The convoy passed so close to burning slash piles and spot fires that some of the trucks’ plastic components started to melt. Eventually the ground crews emerged from the smoke, and reached the safety of the Lee Creek logging road, to everyone’s immense relief.

But there was a problem: not everyone had made it out. From high above, Ingham could see what those on the ground couldn’t: that in the chaos of the retreat, a truck full of Brazilian firefighters had been left behind. Now the fire had trapped them.

At 8:27 p.m, a voice came over the radio into Ingham’s ears. It was Shane Derhousoff, the heavy equipment branch director, planning to drive into the fire and attempt to rescue the trapped Brazilians. Unable to raise him on the radio directly, Ingham texted him frantically. “Shane, do not go in there,” she wrote.*

She saw what he could not: the fire had crossed in multiple places between Derhousoff and the crew. The forest service road was impassable.

Ingham urged the trapped Brazilians to abandon their truck and attempt to hike out between the spreading spot fires. But she got no response on the radio. Hovering above, she watched as the flames and smoke bore down on them — their truck now only a barely visible speck of white amid a spreading curtain of smoke, ash and flames.

At 8:30 p.m., as Ingham watched the situation on the mountainside worsen, a public update went out to area residents describing the back-burn as a success, unaware of the frantic retreat taking place on the ground. “Fire in the ignition area will now burn towards guards,” the statement said, “while being monitored by crews patrolling along the power lines” — the same ground crews that were, at that very moment, racing to escape the flames.

Some residents, who watched the ignition unfold from their properties across the valley, received this update as they were watching the fire escape. It appeared to them that the district, in collaboration with the BC Wildfire Service, was asking them to disbelieve what they were seeing with their own eyes.

Meanwhile, Ingham could see from her helicopter that fire was continuing to spread towards the southeast where 23 homes and other structures were spread out along Meadow Creek Road. As Ingham fired off messages to command about the Brazilians’ entrapment and the now-escaping ignition, homeowners in Meadow Creek watched the fire grow rapidly towards them. Everywhere Ingham looked, the situation seemed to be growing…

Read the full article at The Tyee
Source document: BC Wildfire Service

2 reports

The TyeeIndependentCenter2 days ago
‘Now the Fire Had Trapped Them’

This article is an excerpt from Jesse Winter's book 'Wild Fire: Dispatches from a Country Ablaze,' which details the challenges faced by firefighters during intense wildfire seasons. It recounts a specific incident where a firefighting crew became trapped during the Adams Lake fire in British Columbia's Shuswap region in 2023.

Bias read (Center): The article provides a factual account of a specific event without taking a stance or using biased language. It focuses on describing the experience of firefighters during a wildfire without emphasizing any particular political viewpoint.

The Globe and MailIndependent🔒Center4 days ago
West Kelowna wildfire considered ‘held’ after forcing evacuations

A wildfire in West Kelowna, British Columbia, has been contained following the evacuation of approximately 800 residents from 357 properties. The fire, which burned near Kalamoir Park, was initially out of control but is now reported to be 'held' within its current perimeter. Evacuation alerts remain in effect for additional properties in the area.

Bias read (Center): The article provides factual information about the wildfire containment and evacuation efforts without using biased language or emphasizing any particular political perspective. It focuses on the situation and actions taken by local authorities without editorializing or favoring one side over others

Official sources cited

  • government BC Wildfire Service
  • government Emergency Management Centre for the Central Okanagan

Go to the primary sources (2)

The official sources this coverage is built on. Read them directly to bypass framing.

  • governmentBC Wildfire Service
  • governmentEmergency Management Centre for the Central Okanagan