The Daily Courier

Harrowing video shows drive through fire

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KAMLOOPS — At first, the drive didn’t seem too bad.

Sally Aitken and her husband decided to leave their cabin in British Columbia’s West Chilcotin region due to wildfires on Sunday. They were not ordered to evacuate, but had been without power for days and the only highway out had recently reopened.

As they drove along Highway 20, they saw nothing overly dramatic: light smoke, burned trees. Then they suddenly found themselves in the middle of an intense blaze, with flames leaping on either side of the road and smoke so dark they could barely see.

“Your choice is, when it gets bad, do you turn around ... and then you have to go through what you’ve already been through, or do you just keep going? We just kept going,” recalled Aitken in an interview.

“It was alarming but you can’t panic because you’ve got to get out of the situation and you’ve got to think clearly.”

Aitken, a professor in forest and conservati­on sciences at the University of British Columbia, shot a video of the harrowing experience and posted it on social media. She hopes the video will be instructiv­e to people who are fleeing the hundreds of blazes across B.C.

“People really need to follow the advice of the profession­als who are telling them when to evacuate,” she said.

“But we also need to keep in mind that fire behaviour is very unpredicta­ble.

“As quickly as the weather shifts, the fire shifts.”

Provincial officials said Tuesday that 219 fires were burning and more than 14,000 people have been forced from their homes. Thousands more are under evacuation alerts, meaning they must be prepared to leave at a moment’s notice.

The dynamic nature of the fires does pose challenges for officials handling highway closures, said Mike Lorimer, a regional director at the Transporta­tion Ministry. When drivers come across heavy smoke, they should slow down, put their hazards on and keep driving, he said.

An evacuation alert was issued for the more than 10,000 residents of Williams Lake Monday night. Municipal officials warned wind and lightning forecast for Wednesday could push fires towards the city at a “rapid pace.”

The Tsilhqot’in Nation said four of its six communitie­s near Williams Lake are threatened and many members have already evacuated. Food, water, fuel and medicine are in short supply, it said in a statement.

Joe Alphonse, chief of the Tl’etinqox community, said about 300 people stayed behind to fight the fires and save about 120 homes. They have some heavy equipment but the federal and provincial government­s must bring in more resources, he said.

“Tl’etinqox experience­d evacuation­s twice before and leaving the community caused even more stress and grief. We have no choice but to stay and fight back,” said Alphonse.

Kevin Skrepnek, chief informatio­n officer for the B.C. Wildfire Service, said most people heed evacuation orders, but some do stay behind to fight the fires themselves. He said the province had provided the Tsilhqot’in with satellite phones.

Hot and dry conditions are expected to continue across B.C.’s fire-stricken regions, primarily the central and southern Interior.

Wildfires have scorched about 430 square kilometres of land so far this year in B.C. The blazes are being fought by some 1,000 B.C. firefighte­rs, with about 300 colleagues and support staff arriving from Alberta, Saskatchew­an, Ontario, New Brunswick and Manitoba.

 ?? The Canadian Press ?? A wildfire burns by the side of the highway in the West Chilcotin region in this photo taken from video.
The Canadian Press A wildfire burns by the side of the highway in the West Chilcotin region in this photo taken from video.
 ?? The Canadian Press ?? An area of Boston Flats, south of Cache Creek, is seen on Tuesday after a wildfire ripped through the area.
The Canadian Press An area of Boston Flats, south of Cache Creek, is seen on Tuesday after a wildfire ripped through the area.

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