Medicine Hat News

Access to backcountr­y in B.C.’s Cariboo region restricted in response to fires

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KAMLOOPS Access to the backcountr­y has been banned in a large swath of British Columbia’s Interior as wildfire crews gear up for a challengin­g weekend.

Kevin Skrepnek with the BC Wildfire Service said winds are expected to pick up Saturday with a change in the weather and that risks fuelling fires already burning throughout the Cariboo fire centre.

The ban started Friday and covers 103,000 square kilometres of Crown lands within the Cariboo region in south central B.C.

Skrepnek said the ban is intended to maintain safety and prevent any human-caused fires that could divert their resources at a time of extreme fire danger.

The restrictio­n means people cannot stay in or enter the area without the prior written authorizat­ion. It will remain in place until Sept. 5 but can be lifted earlier if conditions improve.

Thunder showers are in the forecast for the weekend, but Skrepnek said any rain in the Interior is likely to be “patchy” and not enough to douse fires.

“This rain appears to be a fairly temporary fixture. It might buy as a few days of relative reprieve on some fires, but we don’t know yet how much rain is going to fall, where it’s going to fall and how long it’s going to linger for,” he said.

Whether any more rain moves in after Monday is “anyone’s guess,” Skrepnek said.

Commercial operations, people travelling on an official capacity or to their primary residence, travellers using highways and those helping in the firefighti­ng effort are exempt from the backcountr­y restrictio­n.

Exemptions are also in place for the historic town and park of Barkervill­e, adventure tourism operations and guide outfitters that depend on access to the landscape for business, Skrepnek said.

The Cariboo region spans from Loon Lake near Clinton in the south to the Cottonwood River near Quesnel in the north, and from Tweedsmuir Provincial Park in the west to Wells Gray Provincial Park in the east is popular among hikers and campers.

There were 148 active fires across the province Friday.

Two more evacuation orders were implemente­d Friday for sparsely populated areas of the Cariboo near Quesnel Lake and Maeford Lake. People in both communitie­s were told to head to a reception centre in Prince George.

This fire season has burned an estimate 6,460 square kilometres, and is being called unpreceden­ted by officials. That figure is the second-highest area recorded burned in the province since 1958.

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