Firefighting crews have made good progress on wildfires burning throughout the Okanagan, thanks to a couple of days of cooler weather.
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Less smoke in the air also means cleaner air. The for the South, Central and North Okanagan regions are all forecast to be low risk throughout Sunday.
鈥淚 was lucky enough to get up in the air yesterday, late afternoon,鈥 said Noelle Kekula, spokesperson for region鈥檚 complex incident team.鈥淚t looks great. Really good progress has been made.
鈥淐rews really did a great job to get some containment lines in, hand lines, machine guards.鈥
In the areas where machine or hand word wasn鈥檛 possible, retardant and water drops help to make a bit of a line, she said.
鈥淭hose crews really have been putting a lot of backbreaking effort into it, and the successes are being seen. I am happy to say we are seeing progress,鈥 Kekula said, adding a caution that the fires are far from out.
She likens a campfire. The fire may look out, but if you blow on it, the embers will flare up again. People might not see a lot of open flame or smoke at the moment, but the danger is far from over.
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鈥淚t literally is a bed of coals,鈥 said Kekula. The objective now is to extinguish hot spots around the perimeters of the fires, so when the wind blows the fire up again, there is no material around for it to burn.
鈥淭his is a tricky time we are in,鈥 said Kekula. 鈥淵ou feel like there is a bit of a calm, and then the wind picks up and off it goes again. I don鈥檛 want people to think we are out of the woods. It is getting hot and dry again; we wait and see what the weather does.鈥
Kekula said the best thing that could happen right now would be a significant amount of rain, but that isn鈥檛 in the forecast.
The Mount Eneas fire, last estimated at 1374 hectares, is still considered out of control.
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鈥淯ntil we are confident that we have a containment around it, and are confident it won鈥檛 take off on us, it will remain out of control,鈥 said Kekula.
鈥淲e do not have containment on these fires yet.鈥
That includes Goode鈥檚 Creek in Okanagan Mountain Park (400 hectares); Mount Conkle near Summerland (118 hectares); Law Creek near West 91大黄鸭 (10 hectares) and Placer Mountain, near Princeton (320 hectares).
鈥淭hey are all unique. Because of that, we have to approach each one differently. We have 18 helicopters, we have over 200 firefighters and we have these resources we can move around to where we need,鈥 said Kekula.
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Steve Kidd
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