Peace River Area Update

Fire Ban Remains In Effect

Posted on Thu, May 28, 2015

gfx-hsb-wildfiredangerupdate-high

fire_ban_sign2

The fire hazard remains high and it will only take a couple of hot, dry days to be right back up to extreme fire hazard levels again.  Please continue to exercise caution and respect the fire bans and restrictions that are in place throughout the area.  For more information on firebans in the province, please visit www.albertafirebans.ca and also check out your local county, municipal district or town website.

FBS_HubSpotBanner_FireBan_400x70_RGB

FIRE BAN IN EFFECT

Due to the warm, dry conditions and dry surface fuels, the Peace River Wildfire Management Area has upgraded the Fire Restriction up to a FIRE BAN.  

The full fire ban prohibits all open fires, including campfires in campgrounds or backcountry and random camping areas. This includes charcoal briquettes. Portable propane fire pits and gas or propane stoves and barbeques designed for cooking or heating are allowed. All fire permits are suspended or cancelled and no new fire permits will be issued.

The fire ban applies to the province’s Forest Protection Area (FPA). Other jurisdictions outside the FPA, including municipalities and provincial parks, may issue their own fire restrictions or bans. Please check albertafirebans.ca daily for detailed information about restrictions and locations.  If your municipality is not included, please also check their website and social media pages.

Throughout the province, our wildfire management areas are all dealing with multiple wildfires and your co-operation with the fire ban will not only help to reduce the number of new wildfires we need to contend with, but also prevent the unnecessary dispatching of our resources to your burn site. 

Wildfire Hazard

The wildfire hazard remains HIGH.  It is important to prevent wildfires and equally important for firefighters to get to them while they are still small.  With a number of out of control wildfires burning in the province, we can not afford more. Residents and visitors to the Peace River Wildfire Management Area are urged to call 310-FIRE immediately to report a wildfire.

Fire fighting crews, air tankers, helicopters and heavy equipment have been strategically placed throughout the Peace River Wildfire Management Area ready to be quickly dispatched to any wildfire starts.  Our wildfire lookouts and aerial patrol crews will be on the look out for any new wildfire starts, but we need your help too.  PLEASE EXERCISE CAUTION WHEN BURNING OR RECREATING IN THE FOREST AND CALL 310-FIRE TO REPORT WILDFIRES. 

Local Wildfires

There have been 68 wildfires in the Peace River Wildfire Management Area this fire season, all but 6 of which have now been extinguished.  

Active wildfires in the area current as of 6 pm (changes have been bolded):

  • PWF 030, located east of St Isidore, remains under control at 55 hectares in size and is not expected to spread any further.  
  • PWF 050 is now being held at 16 hectares
  • PWF 052  is out of control at 1202.80 hectares and is now 15 percent contained.  Fire fighting crews dozer groups, helicopters and tankers will continue to work on this wildfire tonight and tomorrow
  • PWF 054 is now being held at 36.60 hectares
  • PWF 055 is under control at 0.10 hectares
  • PWF 059 is under control at 0.20 hectares
  • PWF 066 has been extinguished
  • PWF 067 has been extinguished
  • PWF 068 has been extinguished

Firefighting crews, air tankers and dozer groups are working diligently to get these wildfires under control and and will continue to do so until they are extinguished.

The remaining out of control wildfire in the area is located just southwest of the Hotchkiss Lookout down the Chinchaga Forestry Road.  We have combined the wildfires in that area into the Hotchkiss complex. A map of the complex is now available here.  Please note that this map was made before PWF 050 and PWF 054 became classified as being held.  The fires have received 5 mm of rain in the last 24 hours which has drastically helped to calm the fire behavior and spread rates.  Winds are expected to potentially shift to the southeast at 20 km/hr tomorrow with no rain forecasted for the area.  Temperatures will be cool at around 15 degrees Celsius and the relative humidity is expected to be around 25%, so conditions will be favorable for firefighters to continue working to extinguish these fires.     

Firefighters are working very hard to get each of these wildfires under control as quickly as possible.

Provincial Wildfires

Provincially, there are 43 wildfires currently burning, 7 of which remain out of control. Please visit our wildfire status map on our website at www.wildfire.alberta.ca or download the Alberta Wildfire App for more information on what is happening throughout the province.

Wildfire Prevention

With the very high fire hazard and dry forest vegetation in the area, many recreational activities have the potential to ignite a wildfire. It is extremely important that extra caution is taken while recreating. Once the fire ban has lifted please remember to get a fire permit before you burnensure that your campfire is COMPLETELY extinguished before you leave your site and check your ATV for dry debris that may be heating up on the hot parts of your machine.  Most importantly, call 310-FIRE IMMEDIATELY to report a wildfire. In these conditions, it is important to get fire fighting resources to all wildfires as soon as possible.

Please click on the links above for more information on how YOU can prevent wildfires.

 

Remember to help us action wildfires quickly by calling 310-FIRE to report a wildfire.

For more information:

CRYSTAL BURROWS - Information Officer
c: 780.618.6215   o: 780.624.7142
crystal.burrows@gov.ab.ca

Visit us on FacebookTwitter or download our Alberta Wildfire App for android and apple products

Up-to-date information fire restrictions and fire bans is available by calling 1-866-FYI-FIRE (1-866-394-3473).

To report a wildfire call 310-FIRE (310-3473).