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British Columbia

Hot spots from B.C. wildfires will likely burn for months, municipal official says

Chairman Al Richmond of the Cariboo Regional District said hot spots likely won't be doused until the spring, mirroring the Fort McMurray wildfire.

Al Richmond of the Cariboo Regional District says marathon smouldering wouldn't be 'unusual'

Municipal officials in B.C.'s Cariboo region say hot spots from this summer's fires may continue to smoulder for months. (Tina Lovgreen/CBC)

A municipal leader in British Columbia's central Interior says he wouldn't be surprised if wildfires that have chewed through more than 10,600 square kilometres of woodland smoulder until 2018.

ChairmanAlRichmondof the Cariboo Regional District said hot spots from many of the largest fires likely won't be doused until the spring, mirroring the Fort McMurray wildfire.

Alberta officials finally declared that blaze extinguished on Aug. 2,more than ayearafter it broke out.

"It goes down deep into the roots sometimes and then pops up again in the summer,'' Richmondsaid. "That's not unusual, so I think the forest service felt we will be out dealing with these fires until well into October. And we will probably be back with many hot spots again come spring.''

A small wildfire that flared up near Canim Lake, east of 100 Mile House, prompted a tactical evacuation of about 88 properties. There was no formal evacuation order but an alert was in place.

Huge swaths of land that are now just barren stretches of ash-covered ground and charred timber also worry the regional district as it prepares for rain in the fall.

Hot spots from the Fort McMurray wildfire burned for more than two years after the fire broke out in 2015. (Simon Hergott)

"If we have some rains here, which we will be thankful to have to douse the fires, they could bring a mixed blessing and cause some land slippage too, so it's not a pretty picture,'' saidRichmond.

Scores of wildfires burned across British Columbia on Friday. An 1,800 square-kilometre fire straddling the Cariboo and Thompson-Nicola regional districts flared again.

The BC Wildfire Service said the blaze, sparked at the beginning of July near Ashcroft, was 50 per cent contained but recent scorching heat and gusty winds caused the fire to grow.

All available resources, including structural protection crews were sent to the area, the wildfire service said.

In southeastern B.C., an evacuation alert was issued late Thursday for nearly 500 properties about 35 kilometres east of Nelson as a wildfire caused by lightning that broke out in late July grew to 25 square kilometres.

Long weekend warnings

Wildfire service spokesman Kevin Skrepnek said a full backcountry closure was not planned over the Labour Day weekend, but the province strongly recommended that people stay out of woods in the critically dry Kamloops, Cariboo and southeast fire centres.

Campfires remain banned in those areas. The BC Conservation Service said its officers issued 37 tickets over the last week to people who violated the order.

This has been a record-breaking wildfire season for B.C.

Finance Minister Carole James said earlier this month the cost of the fires was tracking $389 million over the budget estimate in February and updated firefighting costs will be included in September's financial update.