Edson Area Update

Edson Forest Area Wildfire Update - May 28, 2023 (9:30 p.m.)

Posted on Sun, May 28, 2023

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Please do not report smoke or flame from within an active wildfire area. Firefighters are being diverted from essential tasks when responding to existing fires reported by the public. You may see smoke or flame within the existing boundary of a wildfire, this is normal.

If you see smoke or flame outside of an active fire area, report it to 310-FIRE. If you or your property is in immediate danger, call 911.

Previous Edson Forest Area Updates - Click here

78 May 28 Lars Water Airtanker

Local forest officer Lars captured an airtanker assisting firefighters with burning peat on WCU002 yesterday. (May 27, 2023) 


 CONTROLLED BURN WILL PRODUCE SMOKE COLUMNS

After thorough planning, AB Wildfire and U.S. firefighters continue to consider controlled burn operations. This will only occur if all weather, wind and other requirements are met. The methods used can include aerial ignition using helicopters between the southern side of EWF040, EWF034 and the Brazeau River.

This activity may continue over the next several days as conditions permit safe and controlled burning operations. All safety precautions will be in place prior to start. 

The goal of this operation is to remove the available fuel between the fire’s edge and the containment line. This strategy slows down and helps limit the spread of the wildfire by decreasing the amount of fire perimeter that must be managed by firefighters.

Firefighters will closely monitor and evaluate the situation as conditions change. In preparation for these operations, fire suppression equipment and firefighters will be in position to extinguish any flame that may be near the containment line.

Note that increased smoke from this wildfire will be visible from surrounding communities. 


NEW INFORMATION as of MAY 25, 2023.
FIRE RESTRICTION, FIRE BAN AND OFF-HIGHWAY VEHICLE RESTRICTION IN EFFECT
 
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Fire Ban banner
OHV Restriction banner
 
New areas have been updated regarding a fire restriction, fire ban and OHV restriction which is in effect within the Forest Protection Area in the Edson Forest Area. We encourage the public and industry to download the AB Fire Bans app or visit www.albertafirebans.ca to learn more about prohibited and allowed actives under these bans and restriction. **If you are looking for information regarding crown land, click on the area you plan to visit and not the nearest town.
 

A fire ban remains in place for Fire Control Zones 13, 14, and 16 FACTSHEET | MAP in the Edson Forest Area. All other areas within the Edson Forest Area are currently under a fire restriction FACTSHEET | MAP, which does permit campfires within designated campgrounds on private and public lands in designated day use areas, but not campfires in backcountry or random camping areas.

An OHV restriction remains in place for Fire Control Zones 13, 14 and 16 - FACTSHEET | MAP.

Screenshot from the Albertafirebans.ca website. The orange section indicates a fire restriction which means you can only have a campfire on private land or in a designated campground, if a fire ban isn't in effect. The red section indicates a fire ban which means you cannot have a campfire in either private or public land (back country). The red also indicates an OHV restriction. ** Please see factsheets above for more information regarding fire restrictions, bans and OHV restrictions. (May 27, 2023).

Be advised that Alberta Parks has it's own set of fire ban levels, please visit their website for more information.

The fire restriction, fire ban and OHV restriction will remain in effect until conditions improve. To view the Alberta Wildfire Fire Ban video, click here. 

FIRESMART BEGINS AT HOME

Protecting your home starts with simple actions.

There are many factors that may impact your property's risk to wildfire. FireSmart Canada has great videos that you can view on various topics. You can check out these videos by clicking here and viewing their videos on YouTube.


GENERAL INFORMATION ON WILDFIRES IN OUR AREA

**Bold indicates new or important information.

The area continues to have limited resources due to these exceptional times. We're sharing valuable resources with many other wildfires in the province but continue to work on and monitor the following wildfires in our area: WCU001, WCU002, EWF035, EWF031, EWF039, EWF037, EWF040 and new starts that are detected. 

Firefighters, aircraft, and heavy equipment have been working in conjunction with county and municipal firefighting services as aggressively as possible to make progress on these wildfires while the conditions have been favorable. Despite all of this hard work, there are still hundreds of kilometers of uncontained wildfire perimeter and fire behaviour forecasts indicate that there may be growth on some of the wildfires throughout the Edson Forest Area.

Lingering smoke can still be visible in some areas and in affected communities. Smoke inversions can trap air near the ground causing dangerous driving conditions and impacting nearby communities. Please use EXTRA CAUTION WHEN DRIVING IN SMOKY CONDITIONS!

While we always appreciate people calling in to report wildfires, the large volume of calls we are currently receiving is diverting our resources away from other essential tasks. As always, please still call 310-FIRE if you see smoke or flame that looks new and potentially unreported, but assume that large columns of smoke and burned over areas have already been detected and reported.

Visit our Wildfire Dashboard to view active wildfires and their stats on the wildfire dashboard

All wildfires in Alberta are investigated and these wildfires remain under investigation. To learn more about wildfire classifications, click here


ACTIVE WILDFIRES

NEW WILDIRE DETECTIONS

EWF050 was detected on May 27. The fire is currently under control and is estimated to be 1.5 ha in size. This wildfire is approximately is 3 km west of Highway 753, south of Highway 16. You can view all these wildfires on our wildfire dashboard.


PEMBINA WILDFIRE COMPLEX - EWF031/039, RWF034/040

Today, there were 97 firefighters and IMT support staff being shared between all fires on the Complex. There were 60 pieces of heavy equipment, and 27 helicopters assigned to the complex. An airtanker group remains available to respond if necessary.

Access to the interior of the fire perimeter continued to improve on parts of the fire not impacted by today’s rain showers. Dozers were creating containment line on both the northern and southern sides of the wildfire complex. Crews were working directly on the fire line using tools and water to mop up, secure, and fill in some of the gaps between the fire and the containment line. They continued to make progress on securing the perimeters of the EWF031. 

Fire behavior started out as moderate throughout the morning with stable temperatures and moderate relative humidity. Cloud cover decreased temperatures and increased humidity. Rain showers moved into some areas of the of the wildfire complex this afternoon with increasing winds and precipitation while other portions of the complex receive no precipitation. Surface fire was observed earlier in the day followed by increased fire activity in the afternoon including crowning and fire spread on EWF031 extending from the excursion yesterday on the northeast side of the fire.

The expected forecast will bring warming and drying conditions through the coming week.

EWF031 was detected on May 4 and is located 25 km west of Lodgepole, 20 km northwest of Brazeau Dam and 14 km southeast of Edson. The fire is classified as out of control and is estimated to be 125,033 ha in size. This number will change due to increased fire behavior that occurred today. Any fire growth today was within fire containment lines.

Today firefighting resources were focused on the excursion located on the northeast portion of the fire. This excursion continued to advance north, northwest of the fire perimeter but is still within the containment line. The team had aircraft on the excursion all day including airtankers using water and retardant. Dozers and crews focused their efforts on building and securing guard around the excursion. They secured approximately 2 km of containment line around the excursion and are expected to have an additional 2 km constructed by this evening. 

There is a containment line on the north side of the fire working downwards towards 6 Mile Road as well as a containment line located south from Dora’s Corner (completed several days ago). Both lines will have continued air support as visibility allows, and it is safe for aviation resources to operate. 

EWF039 located near Carrot Creek, is currently being held. The fire is currently estimated to be 165 ha. The fire is fully wrapped in containment line and is a kilometer away from the Carrot Creek lookout tower. Crews successfully left the area and have been repositioned on fire EWF031. Personnel are continuing to monitor the area available to respond if necessary.

RWF034 and RWF040 have connected and will be managed as one fire although they will be tracked individually for the time being.

Containment line construction continues from the south end of the Brazeau Reservoir then proceeding west along the south shore of the Brazeau River to the southwest corner of RWF040, then proceeding north. Preparations continue for a controlled burn between the southern edge of the RWF034 and RWF040 fires and the Brazeau River. The operation will take place sometime this week when conditions are safe for allowing the operation to proceed. The conditions the last several days were not conducive for conducting the operation.

RWF034 is located near the O'Chiese Reserve and classified as out of control. The fire is currently estimated at 87,108 ha in size.

Effective May 23, 2023, around 16:00hrs, the evacuation order for the O’Chiese FN was lifted and there are no alerts in place.

RWF040 The fire is being monitored by firefighters and support staff assigned to the complex and can respond if necessary. The fire is currently estimated to be 5,089 ha in size. Some smoke was observed within the fire line which is to be expected with the trend of warming and drying conditions. The previous growth occurred mostly to the west. The Blackstone Lookout Tower in the area is currently not at risk.

By: Kent Romney, Pembina Complex. Wildfire Information Officer, Oregon Department of Forestry.

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Video of airtankers working ahead of the excursion on EWF031 today. Video can only be viewed on website and app.  (May 28, 2023)


DEEP CREEK WILDFIRE COMPLEX – EWF035, WCU001 & WCU002

WCU001 was detected on April 29 and remains classified as out of control. The wildfire has been remapped and is estimated to be 6,281 ha in size, no new growth was recorded outside the fire perimeter. The wildfire zone is located southeast of Entwistle and west over the Pembina River where it spread north and travelled over Highway 16. The wildfire is parallel with Highway 16 and moved further west where the wildfire spread just north of Wildwood and now rests at Chip Lake. 

WCU002 was detected on the evening of April 29 and is a mutual aid wildfire located on both sides of Highway 22, north of Highway 16. The wildfire is currently burning out of control. The wildfire is estimated to be 2,477 ha in size.

There was no new growth outside on either of these wildfires and very little fire activity was observed. Firefighters made good progress again today on containing the wildfire and "mopping up", meaning their putting out hotspots.

There were flare-ups on the interior again yesterday and firefighters expect that this will continue to happen in the peat areas. Helicopters continue to work to extinguish hot spots within the fire perimeter. The fire is burning deep into the peat, shouldering under the layers of peat and burning roots and other organic matter. 

Patches of unburned vegetation may continue to burn inside the perimeter. Firefighters will often use an indirect attack approach to these challenging wildfires, letting them burn up to a natural break such as a road or a river. This ensures that the remaining vegetation within doesn’t continue to burn later in the season. Residents may see smoldering and flare ups at times within the perimeter. This is a normal occurrence until firefighters contain the fire perimeter to ensure it doesn’t grow, then work their way from the outside edge inwards. Firefighters will need to search for these hotspots, sometimes digging into the ground with their hands and feeling for heat (a process called cold trailing). They use hand tools to dig the spots out and use water to extinguish them. This process can also cause steam which may look like smoke. Simply putting water on a fire does not extinguish it. This process can take a long time and residents can expect that the fire will remain "out of control" until firefighters are confident that the fire is contained. At that time, the status will be changed to "being held" while they work towards extinguishment.

Deep ash pits and burning peat are dangerous. We ask residents to be extra cautious near burnt areas.

EWF035 was detected on May 5. The wildfire was detected 4.3 km north of Twp Rd 560, 7.5 km east of East Bank Road, and 6 km south of Twp Rd 570. We invite anyone who would like to see the exact location on a map to visit our dashboard by clicking here.

This wildfire is classified as out of control and has been remapped and is estimated to be 19,592 ha in size. The wildfire is south of Township Road 570, has burnt down to the south and continues to site two kilometers north of the railroad track in Niton Junction. The fire moved across the Range Rd 123 and burnt up to the Lobstick River.

Weather and available fuel for the fire to consume are important factors that influence fire behaviour. Wind, humidity and temperature are key factors in fire behaviour. Hotter temperatures, stronger winds and lower moisture in the air all contribute to creating an extreme fire hazard. Such conditions allow a wildfire to start quickly and spread extremely fast. These kinds of wildfires are dangerous and difficult to bring under control.

We do anticipate that fire behaviour will increase during the “peak burning period”. This is normally mid-afternoon, when temperatures are hottest and relative humidity drops. Fire activity tends to slow down in the morning and late evenings when temperatures are cooler and humidity levels are higher. 

We anticipate temperatures in the high teens to the low 20s with 40 to 50% relative humidity in the next few days. This should help keep fire activity low to moderate on the complex during non-peak burning times. Winds are expected to be light tomorrow, 15km/h from the northwest gusting up to 30, shifting to the southeast into Tuesday. The lack of precipitation, warming temperatures and increasing winds continue to create some fire behaviour. Firefighters were responding to flare ups within the interior of the wildfire perimeter today and helicopters continue to bucket hotspots. Some precipitation is in the forecast over the coming days, however we'll need much more precipitation to significantly improve the current dry conditions.

Today, wildland firefighters continued to work with heavy equipment to contain the wildfire on the south sections of the fire. The hotshot crews from the U.S. worked on the east-south-east side of the fire where hotspots were prevalent. Helicopters with water buckets were also assisting the firefighters with their efforts. Helicopters with buckets were working near Sunset Lake and other areas around the east side of the fire. The heavy equipment is having difficulty in some portions of the wildfire due to wet areas but making good progress and are nearly done containing the south side. 

The perimeter from the northeast of the fire towards the northwest was cool again today with little to no fire activity. Firefighters are confident that the whole north and west boundary of the wildfire, down East Bank Road (Range Road 133A) is now contained and expect that the containment line wouldn't be challenged if the winds pushed the wildfire towards that direction again.

The complex has 72 wildland firefighters, four helicopters, 26 pieces of heavy equipment and 28 overhead staff that are part of the incident management team and crew supervision. Additional resources are expected to arrive in the coming days.

By: Isabelle Chenard. Wildfire Information Officer, Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources and Forestry.

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WILD HAY WILDFIRE COMPLEX - EWF037 and EWF040

EWF037 is being held at 578 ha and EWF040 is being held at 684 ha. There are multiple wildfires located south of the Little Smoky River, north of the Wild Hay River and east of Hwy 40 north. These also include the areas near the Willow Haul Road and the Jack Wright Road north of Hinton. These wildfires were formerly reported as five separate fires, but due to more accurate GPS measuring, have been determined to be two larger fires.

There has been no perimeter growth on this complex is several days. Smoke and flame may still be observed within the interior of both EWF037 and EWF040. This complex is now being patrolled and monitored.  


PUBLIC WILDFIRE MAPS

Visit our Wildfire Dashboard to view active wildfires and their stats on the wildfire dashboard

Deep Creek Wildfire Complex (EWF035, WCU002 and WCU001) May 25, 2023 - public map - Click here

Pembina Wildfire Complex (EWF031, EWF039, RWF034, RWF040) May 23 , 2023 - public map - Click here. *this map does not show other wildfire nearby.

Edson Forest Area Fires May 23, 2023 - public map - Click here

Note: The wildfire perimeter map is an estimate based on measurements such as GPS, aerial scanning and satellite imagery. This estimated perimeter can change as more accurate measurements become available. Areas within the fire perimeter may not have been affected by wildfire. 


WILDFIRE LINKS AND TOOLS

There are multiple EVACUATION ORDERS & ALERTS in the Province. Please visit Alberta Emergency Alerts or your community webpage for more information.

For road closure information, please visit: 511.alberta.ca

The NASA FIRMS Fire Information website is a great resource to give an idea of the location of wildfires in the area, but it should be noted that this data is based on interpolation and often can make a wildfire appear larger than it actually is.

Wildfire smoke is a tool used for the location of smoke firesmoke.ca


DO NOT FLY DRONES NEAR WILDFIRES!

The use of recreational drones over wildfires in Alberta is dangerous, illegal and could result in a fine of up to $15,000* for putting aircraft and people at risk. Please give Alberta firefighters the space they need to do their jobs safely. *Transport Canada


COMMUNITY EMERGENCY INFORMATION | EVACUATIONS

A MESSAGE FROM THE MUNICIPALITIES

If you are evacuating, gather important documents, medication, and enough food and water to be away from home for at least 3 days. Take pets with you.

For updates from Yellowhead County and Town of Edson, please visit their Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/yellowheadcounty  or www.yhcounty.ca for updates. Evacuees can call 1-833-334-4630 for more information.

For updates from Parkland County, please visit their Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/ParklandCountyAB. Residents in the affected areas can contact the Emergency Information Line at 1-780-968-8888.

For residents with health concerns related to smoke you can find the air quality map here: https://www.alberta.ca/about-the-air-quality-health-index.aspx. If you have smoke related health concerns, please contact AB 811 and click here for more information.


 WILDFIRE PREVENTION TIPS

Albertans are always asked to use caution when working or recreating in the outdoors:

Wildfire Dashboard

 ALBERTA WILDFIRE INFORMATION

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For more information, please contact: 

ACTING AREA INFORMATION OFFICER
Mélissa Lamadeleine on behalf of Caroline Charbonneau
Wildfire Information Officer | Edson Forest Area
Cell:  780-728-5618
  
 Melissa Circle
 
 
AREA INFORMATION OFFICER
Caroline Charbonneau
 
 
Caroline Button High Qua
 
RELATED INFORMATION

 

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