North Okanagan plumber digs up WW II-era explosive - Action News
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British Columbia

North Okanagan plumber digs up WW II-era explosive

A North Okanagan plumber and gas fitter got quite the surprise Monday when he dug up what he thought looked like the head of an axe, but turned out to be a piece of unexploded ordnance.

Canadian military trained in the area during and after the war

A Vernon plumber and gas fitter dug up this old mortar round. (Photo by Josh Grahame)

A North Okanagan plumber and gas fitter got quite the surprise Monday when he dug up an old explosive while digging a trench to install pipe on a property in Spallumcheen, B.C.

"I thought it was a rock and dug it out, and tossed it to the side," said Josh Grahame, owner of Grahame Mechanical in Vernon.

However, upon closer inspection he realized, "that doesn't look right."

"At first I thought it was an axe head," Grahame toldRadio West'sJosh Pag. "It actually looked like a bullet head froma gun, just a lot bigger."

Grahame notified the homeowner, who called the police.

The unexploded ordnance, an explosive weapon or bomb that never went off or worked properly, was identified as a mortar round by RCMP.

In a statement, RCMP said the area has been cordoned off and the explosives disposal unit was sent to remove the ordnance.

"This incident is a good reminder for anyone who locatesan explosive deviceto leaveit alone and contact the authoritiesimmediately," said Const. Jocelyn Noseworthy.

History of unexploded ordnances in the area

This isn't the first time an unexploded weapon has been found in the North Okanagan.

The Canadian military trainedthroughoutthe North Okanagan during and after theSecond World War.

According to the Canadian government,seven people have diedsince the late 1940s on two of the Vernon-area legacy sites afterencounters withunexploded ordnances.

In 1973,two kids were killed and two other people were hurt by an explosion caused by a mortar found near a trailer park in the Cosens Bay area.

Since then, the government has performed a number of clearance operations at old Vernon military training sites and found unexploded ordnances; people throughout the region have continued toreportfinding them as well.

In 2015, the Department of National Defence trained nine Okanagan Indian Band membersto locate ammunitionbecause of all of the mortars that had been found on reserve land.

The Canadian government advises that if you see something that looks like ammunition that didn't explode, do not touch it, leave the area immediately and call 911.

With files from Josh Pag and Radio West