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Dozens of wildfires burning in B.C.’s Slocan Valley

Located between two long bodies of water in B.C.’s Southern Interior, the Slocan Valley is currently alight with wildfires.

Within short drives of either bodies of water, and the valley itself, more than 50 fires are burning in the area.

Seven wildfires are located on the western side of the Columbia River and five are located on the eastern side of Duncan Lake and Kootenay Lake.

In between those bodies of water — where valley distances in that West Kootenay region span between 50 and 100 kilometres — are 42 wildfires.

Further, within the Southeast Fire Centre, there are currently 110 wildfires, with 83 deemed out of control (75 per cent).

Three of them are deemed wildfires of note, and two of them are in the Slocan Valley: the Aylwin Creek and Komonko Creek blazes, which are side by side on the east side of Slocan Lake, and each is listed as out of control.


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The Aylwin Creek fire is estimated at 400 hectares and is being fought by two unit crews and 14 pieces of heavy equipment. Two structure protection specialists and three structure protection crews are also at the scene.

On Wednesday, the regional district expanded an evacuation order originally issued on July 18 to include the entire village of Silverton and 17 surrounding addresses.

The Komonko Creek fire is sized at 534 hectares but there are no evacuation alerts or orders for this fire.

Five helicopters are also batting the two fires, which are lumped under the Slocan Lake complex.

Further, just across the lake from those fires is the Nemo Creek blaze, which is estimated at 823 hectares and is also out of control.

Northeast of those, at the top of Kootenay Lake, is the Argenta Creek wildfire, where an evacuation alert was upgraded on Thursday to an evacuation order.

That blaze is listed at 735 hectares, with the order affecting 191 properties within the communities of Argenta and Johnsons Landing.

“Since July 19, crews, heavy equipment, and aviation resources have been working on a cluster of (four) wildfires at the north end of Kootenay Lake,” BC Wildfire said.

“Crews and resources have been working across fires in this cluster as objectives and tactics require.”

Notably, BC Wildfire said crews and heavy equipment were pulled back on Tuesday afternoon due to unsafe conditions, with the fire then crossing containment lines that evening.

A list of evacuation alerts and orders is available on the regional district’s website.

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