The rain didn鈥檛 pour down Monday night 鈥 but the drizzle that did fall was just enough to help dampen some of the roughly 300 wildfires burning in B.C.鈥檚 Interior 鈥 the latest act by Mother Nature welcomed by residents and fire crews alike.
鈥淚t doesn鈥檛 solve the problem, but it helps,鈥 Todd Nessman, manager of fire operations for BC Wildfire Service, said in a news release Tuesday (Aug. 17).
It rained about 0.5 millimetres in 琉璃神社, 10.8 mm in Vernon and 11.6 mm in Merritt, where thousands of residents remain on evacuation alert. Some regions are still seeing spurts of rain, with more in the forecast overnight.
ALSO READ: Coquihalla reopens to essential travel only, no stopping
In fact, after a day and a half of being closed, officials were able to re-open the Coquihalla to traffic, so long as commuters drive right through with no stopping.
Quick wildfire stats:
- Since April 1 there have been 1,513 wildfires, 264 currently burning 850,000 hectares of land
- Total personnel: 3,627, of which 1,185 are contract firefighters and 519 are from out-of-province
- There are 86 evacuation orders in effect, impacting 8,262 properties
- There are 125 evacuation alerts ongoing, impacting 22,729 properties
Weather will dictate weeks ahead
Mid-way through August, many are looking to back to school and fall. But for fire crews in the Interior, it鈥檚 a matter of day-by-day.
Nessman told reporters that another drying trend is expected to begin Wednesday but forecasts are calling for cooler temperatures than the prior weekend鈥檚 hear.
ALSO READ: 10 Okanagan Indian Band homes, 1 business lost in White Rock Lake wildfire
He said the 鈥渟eries of lows coming through the province鈥 will help in the battles against the largest fires, namely the destructive White Rock Lake fire, Lytton Creek fire and July Mountain wildfire.
ashley.wadhwani@bpdigital.ca
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