There’s been a surge in wildfire activity in British Columbia associated with this week’s high temperatures and thousands of lightning strikes, with dozens of new fires sparked in the past day.
The BC Wildfire Service online dashboard shows more than 30 new fires in the past 24 hours, and the service said more were expected.
A total of more than 80 fires were burning across the province on Thursday.
“Yesterday, approximately 13,167 lightning strikes were recorded across B.C., with over 9,000 occurring within the Prince George Fire Centre,” the service said in a statement on Thursday, adding that with hot and dry conditions this week, “fuels are extremely susceptible to ignition.”
Emergency officials in the Okanagan Valley said the hot temperatures mean a fire that has forced the evacuation of several hundred properties could see more activity, although firefighting efforts on Wednesday helped tame the blaze.
A statement from Central Okanagan Emergency Operations said aerial drops of fire retardant and water were effective in reducing fire behaviour.
“However, as temperatures increase throughout the day, fire behaviour may increase,” the agency said.
It said 35 wildfire firefighters were responding to the blaze about two kilometres north of Peachland between highways 97 and 97C. There were also 14 firefighters from the Peachland, Kelowna and North Westside departments.
The fire was displaying rank-two fire behaviour, meaning “a surface fire with some open flame and a slow to moderate rate of spread,” the emergency agency said.
It said an assessment was underway to evaluate evacuation orders and alerts and an update would be provided later Thursday.
The blaze, dubbed the Drought Hill wildfire, led police and fire crews to go door-to-door Wednesday to evacuate residents from about 400 properties near Peachland.
Another 225 properties remain on evacuation alert due to the fire that started Wednesday afternoon and quickly spread through tinder-dry brush.
Environment Canada has issued more than a dozen heat warnings in B.C., including in the central Okanagan, where temperatures could reach 38 C on Thursday.
Temperatures are expected to moderate on Friday, a weather statement said.
The Drought Hill blaze is one of a handful burning near communities in B.C.
The Lytton First Nation issued an evacuation order Thursday for two sparsely populated reserves due to immediate danger posed by the out-of-control wildfire nearby, about 10 kilometres south of the Village of Lytton.
The order said residents were to leave the Lytton 26A and Skwayaynope 26 reserves immediately and head to a reception centre.
Officials with the Lytton First Nation said there are only two households on the reservation plots, one of which is unoccupied, while the other belongs to a member of the First Nation fire fighting team on the front lines of the fire.
A spokesman for the First Nation said it was not the same area evacuated in June 2021, when much of Lytton was destroyed by a wildfire and two people were killed.
The current Lytton wildfire was recently measured at 6.5 square kilometres and continues to burn out of control, causing the Thompson-Nicola Regional District and local First Nations to issue a series of evacuation alerts this week.
Barj Dehaan said he was driving back home to Vancouver on Wednesday when he started seeing smoke about 30 kilometres east of Lytton.
“As I got closer, I could see this huge plume of smoke. And as I got closer, I could see the literal fire as well, trees on fire. I have not seen a live fire like that before,” he said Thursday.
He said the region has been very hot.
“The air quality was poor, and I could feel a burning sensation in my throat, strong smell of burning wood. And then I started thinking about the people who live in that town, that here they are again, having to deal with a fire that seems to be out of control,” he said.
The BC Wildfire Service has meanwhile upgraded a blaze in the Fraser Valley to a “wildfire of note” and is warning campers to leave the Harrison Lake area as roads are closed ahead of the long weekend.
The 65-hectare Bear Creek fire is the first fire of note in B.C. since July 9, when the Izman Creek blaze near Lytton lost that status.
The designation is reserved for fires that are “creating an increased level of interest.”
— With files from CHNL
This report by The Canadian Press was first published July 31, 2025.
Ashley Joannou and Fatima Raza, The Canadian Press