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British Columbia

Smoked out of great outdoors by wildfires, British Columbians stay active inside

Its not just tourists who are feeling the heat. Residents of B.C. towns hit hard by smoke from ongoing wildfires are changing the way they play as poor air quality remains a concern.

Prince George, Kelowna residents head inside to escape smoke

Kelowna mom Sarah Anson, along with her kids Rylen, seven, and Lexi, three, sought to escape the smoke blanketing the city at the YMCA pool (pictured in the background). (Brady Strachan/CBC)

British Columbiansin communities hit hard by smoke from ongoing wildfires are changing the way they play aspoor air quality remains a concern.

The air quality in Prince George has received a "very high health risk" rating for 11 of the past 14 days.

That means residents are advised to limit or reduce outdoor activities, making University of Northern B.C.'s Northern Sport Centre a big draw for fitness-minded people.

UNBC's Northern Sports Centre (seen here in a 2012 Google Streetview image) has been a busy place, a staff member said. (Google Streetview)

"We are actually getting a lot more traffic with the conditions that are happening with the wildfires and smoke," said membership coordinator Tania Bopp.

That's a big change from usual, Boppadded.Normally the facility is busiest during the cold, snowy winter months.

Facility open to evacuees

Victoria Harlos frequently walks on the indoor track at the sports centre,although she'd preferto be walking outside in summer sun.

"Since all of this, I'm here 100 per cent of the time. I'm not walking outside at all," she said.

Bopp said the centre has struggled to accommodate the increased demand for the indoor sports field.

"The outdoor local sports organizations are coming in," she said. "Football, rugby and baseball."

However it's not just locals welcome at the Northern SportCentre, Bopp said. Registered wildfire evacuees can use it, free of charge.

Soccer games cancelled

However, another Prince George facility is not busy: the city is delaying the reopening of Masich Place Stadium due to the smoke.

That means UNBC's Timberwolves men's soccer team has been forced to cancel itsseason-opening games against the University of Victoria Vikes this weekend.

Masich Place Stadium in Prince George, B.C., was closed as it underwent $4.8 million in improvements (Andrew Kurjata/CBC)

"We've had to make the decision before UVic flies up, because you don't wanna have them spend that amount of money to come up and not play," coach Steve Simonsonsaid, calling it a mutual decision between the two schools.

"We started our pre-season on August the 1st and I think we've been outside three times the air quality's not been the best."

Simonson called it inconvenient to cancel the games but athlete safety was a priority.

Masich Place Stadium had been closed as it underwent a $4.8-million improvement project.

Beach town turns to indoor pool

In Kelowna, where summertime is usually about beaches or boating on the lake, families are heading indoors to places like the YMCA's indoor pool.

"H20 Adventure and Fitness Center has probably seen, you know, like, 30 to 40 per cent increase of traffic over the past couple of weeks due to the smoke," said Erica Marshal, the facility's marketing manager.

"We don't have air conditioning in our house, so we're literally in [the smoke] all the time," said Sarah Anson, visiting the pool with her kids her kids Rylen, seven, and Lexi, three.

"It's nice to just get out of it for a little bit."

Anson says her son is having a tougher go of things, fighting off a cough lately.

Rain showers are in the forecast for the city this weekend, however, which could clearsome of the smoke away.

With files from Nicole Oud and Brady Strachan