Rain will throw cold water on ‘massive’ wildfire growth in southern regions

‘There is finally a break from extreme heat and high winds in much of the NWT,' says NWT Fire


The Deh Cho Bridge is down to one lane traffic until further notice. The timer shows 503 seconds left to wait. Here wildfire smoke darkens the sky last weekend. (James O'Connor/CKLB)

The rain currently falling in some regions will help limit some of the massive fire growth experienced over the weekend, says NWT Fire.

Several major fires continue to burn, but there are no communities currently at risk. (Image courtesy of TerraMetrics/Google Maps)

There are several large wildfires still burning in the Dehcho and South Slave regions and smoke will be pushed into various communities, depending on the winds.

The break from wildfire smoke that blanketed the Yellowknife area over the past several days did arrive Tuesday when the winds shifted from the south 180-degrees to the north.

However, when those same favourable winds moved slightly to the east, the city was again immersed in smoke from five-hectare wildfire ZF034-24, burning a good distance away, at the west of Gordon Lake.

Currently, there are no communities at risk in the NWT, but heavy smoke and ash could continue in some areas. Visibility and air quality could vary a lot.

Amy Kennedy is a wildfire information officer with the GNWT.

“We know this can be stressful, but crews are working hard to ensure that communities continue to be safe,” she stated.

“There is finally a break from extreme heat and high winds in much of the NWT. There will be cooler temperatures, lighter winds from the north with rain in some regions.”

Wildfire SS066 on Monday inside Fort Smith community boundaries was human-caused and it came within metres of local homes and could have spread quickly to the drier areas.

Firefighters from the town and NWT Fire worked quickly to extinguish the blaze.

As for road closures, there is nothing wildfire related, but Highway 3 at the Deh Cho Bridge is down to one lane until further notice after a vehicle collision damaged part of the structure last week. The single lane is controlled with traffic lights.

To date this year, there have been 167 wildfires, 1,191,365 hectares burned.

Yellowknife can’t seem to escape wildfire smoke whatever the wind direction is in this still image taken Wednesday a lunchtime. (Image courtesy of FireSmoke.ca)

About the Author

James O'Connor
James O’Connor joined CKLB 101.9 FM at the start of 2024, after working as a journalist, photo editor and managing editor at newspapers in Manitoba and the Northwest Territories. James also has experience in politics, arts, service clubs and the NWT’s non-profit sector. At this point in his lengthy career, James is thrilled to be working at such a unique media outlet and always welcomes notes from listeners at: james.oconnor@cklbradio.com.