Out-of-control wildfire in Kootenay National Park expands in size - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 26, 2024, 06:40 AM | Calgary | -17.5°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Calgary

Out-of-control wildfire in Kootenay National Park expands in size

An out of control wildfirecaused by lightning inKootenay National Park, in British Columbia near the Alberta border,continues to grow.

No threat to the public or infrastructure: Parks Canada

Smoke emerges from a heavily treed area.
Lightning caused an out of control wildfire burning in Kootenay National Park. On Sunday afternoon Parks Canada said the size of the fire was estimated around 190 hectares (Supplied by Parks Canada)

An out of control wildfirecaused by lightning inKootenay National Park, in British Columbia near the Alberta border,continues to grow.

The blaze, which started burning in the Mitchell Ridge area of the parkon Wednesday approximately two kilometres east of the Kootenay Valley Viewpoint and seven kilometres north of Nipika Mountain Resort is nowestimated at 190 hectares in size as of 12:15p.m. on Sunday,Parks Canada said in a Facebook post.

"The primary concern continues to be how early we're seeing this type of fire behaviour in these areas," Charlie McLellan, fire and vegetation specialist for Parks Canada in Lake Louise, Yoho and Kootenay, told CBC in an interview Saturday.

"It's certainly abnormal, normally we don't have lightning-ignited fires or see this type of fire growth until the months of July and August."

Smoke can be seen emerging from a heavily treed area. There are mountains in the background.
An out-of-control wildfire in the Mitchell Ridge area of Kootenay National Park in B.C. seen Friday evening. (Dave Will/CBC)

According to Parks Canada,the growth was primarily seen at the northern flank where it is burning in a forest stand with higher levels of fuel loading.

The agency said23 firefighters and 3 helicopters are focusing on reinforcing containment on the southwest flank and minimizing growth into areas of blowdown that are more challenging to suppress.

Fire behaviour is expected to ease by early this week with the forecasted precipitation and a return to lower seasonal temperatures, Parks Canada said.

A map of Kootenay National Park, which indicates the Mitchell Ridge Wildfire area in orange.
Crews are responding to the wildfire in the Mitchell Ridge area of the park, approximately two kilometres east of the Kootenay Valley Viewpoint. (Supplied by Parks Canada)

Cooler temperatures and precipitation are forecasted for Monday which could help fire suppression activities.

The fire comes as Alberta's wildfire crisis drags on, and as the return of hot weather threatens to escalate the danger in communities under threat.

Intense wildfires continue to burn across the province, forcing thousands of Albertans from their homes and cloaking communities both near and far from the flames with smoke.

According to Alberta Wildfire's online dashboard, as of 1:30 p.m. on Sunday, 84wildfires were burning inside Alberta's forest protection zones and 22are classified as out of control.