The Prince George Citizen

Firefighte­rs make progress on Dog Creek Trail blaze

- Mark NIELSEN Citizen staff mnielsen@pgcitizen.ca

Crews hope to have the Dog Creek Trail wildfire completely surrounded with a fireguard by the end of the day Saturday.

First discovered on Tuesday, the lightning-caused fire about 30 kilometres northwest of Vanderhoof has grown significan­tly. It was listed at 314 hectares as of Friday but is actually much larger, B.C. Wildfire Service informatio­n officer Heather Rice said.

“Late yesterday afternoon and last night we had some gusty winds so we did see some fairly-good growth on the northeaste­rly end of the fire, increasing the fire by at least 100 hectares,” she said.

Cooler temperatur­es and rain overnight have helped stem its progress.

“The fire itself did not get the same amount of rain as Vanderhoof itself and the areas around Vanderhoof, but it did get some and it’s currently receiving some rain,” Rice said Friday afternoon.

“That certainly helps our efforts and allows us to work closer to the fire edges and help us put a guard all the way around the fire.”

In all, 51 firefighte­rs were on the scene Friday, supported by three pieces of heavy equipment and six helicopter­s.

“The full south half of the fire has been guarded and we just need to tie it off on the northeaste­rly side,” Rice said.

Both a smoky skies bulletin and an evacuation alert remain in place as a result of the fire.

The evacuation alert stretches east from Dog Creek Forest Service Road to Geernaert Road and south from the Barlow Forest Service Road to the Nechako River, Westwood Road and Braeside Road.

A smoky skies bulletin is also in place for Valemount, McBride and all communitie­s within the southern half of the Robson Valley where the West Cranberry Creek fire near Valemount held steady at 45 hectares thanks to 10 millimetre­s of rain over Thursday night.

“They haven’t given us an official containmen­t number but they have machine guard around 90 per cent of the fire and then they just have that tied into some natural features like rocky boundaries,” BCWFS informatio­n officer Forrest Tower said.

 ?? B.C. WILDFIRE SERVICE HANDOUT PHOTO ?? The Dog Creek Trail wildfire as seen from the air on July 17.
B.C. WILDFIRE SERVICE HANDOUT PHOTO The Dog Creek Trail wildfire as seen from the air on July 17.

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