Skip to content
Join our Newsletter

Sayward wildfire called ‘90 per cent contained’

Fire crews continued to make progress Monday on a wildfire burning near Sayward since Friday. “We are calling it 90 per cent contained at this point,” Coastal fire Centre information officer Dorthe Jakobsen said at mid-afternoon Monday.

Fire crews continued to make progress Monday on a wildfire burning near Sayward since Friday.

“We are calling it 90 per cent contained at this point,” Coastal fire Centre information officer Dorthe Jakobsen said at mid-afternoon Monday.

The 21-hectare blaze was being fought by 30 firefighters, but air support from a helicopter was no longer deemed necessary.

“They’re just mopping it up and making sure that they’ve got that completely caught.”

The Sayward fire is one of 29 in the Coastal Fire Region since the provincial wildfire season began April 1.

“We did have a little blip,” Jakobsen said. “We’ve had 11 fires in the last seven days.”

Provincewide, the B.C. Wildfire Service has come through its busiest period of the young 2019 wildfire season, responding to several blazes, including one that prompted an evacuation order west of Prince George.

Weather has been unseasonably warm in the province, but wildfire service spokesman Kevin Skrepnek said they believe fire conditions will improve.

“Bit of an early-season blip,” said Skrepnek.

Temperatures are due to fall between four and eight degrees, accompanied by showers, he said.

“We are expecting a return to much more seasonal conditions.”

A short, intense heat wave set temperature records in many parts of B.C. last week and raised the fire danger rating to moderate or high over much of the province, with pockets of extreme danger in small areas around Prince George.

A blaze broke out Saturday near the community of Lejac, about five kilometres east of Fraser Lake, and flames scorched more than two square kilometres of bush within hours.

A state of local emergency was declared and an evacuation order was issued, but that order had been downgraded to an alert by late Sunday while the emergency declaration was rescinded.

Two small fires, one north of Fort St. John and another just east of Kamloops, were also handled by wildfire service crews, aircraft and other equipment.

“Things have definitely stabilized. That’s good news,” said Skrepnek.

A wet May and June will be the key to heading off another devastating wildfire season, he said, cautioning that the past weekend should not be considered a sign of bad conditions to come.

“How much rain we get between the May long weekend and the Canada Day long weekend really sets the stage for how the summer is going to go.”

The wildfire service lists both the fire near Fraser Lake and the one near Kamloops as under investigation but possibly human caused and Skrepnek urged caution as the province prepares for the upcoming three-day weekend.

“There will be a stepped up level of enforcement,” he said, “not just for fires, but to ensure people are behaving themselves out there,” he said.