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The arrival of cool, damp weather is helping wildfire crews battling to get control of the Dryden Creek wildfire in Squamish. Paul Johnson reports.
Anticipated rain could aid in efforts to suppress the Pocket Knife Creek wildfire and other blazes around northeast B.C.
A low-pressure weather system just off the coast should keep temperatures down into next week, the B.C. Wildfire Service says ...
The Squamish Fire Rescue chief, Aaron Foote, told the briefing that extra groundcrews and another helicopter had arrived to help the fight. The district had earlier said on social media that a Black ...
A fire that has been burning out of control as it threatened Squamish, B.C., this week is expected to be declared "held" in ...
As flames threatened homes and forests near Squamish, local photographer Jillian A. Brown was there to capture not just the ...
Homeowner Gavin Singh said they woke up and saw 'fire everywhere' as the Dryden Creek wildfire came dangerously close to the ...
This year's wildfire season in Canada is shaping up to be the second-worst on record and federal officials are warning of a ...
Gray said most of the smoke this year is being produced by dense boreal forest in northern parts of British Columbia, Alberta and Saskatchewan. Boreal regions typically see wildfire in May and June, ...
Squamish RCMP is looking to determine the source of the Dryden Creek wildfire, which is suspected to be human caused. Police ...
But that didn't show how close the Dryden Creek wildfire got to homes overnight. Aaron Foote, the chief of Squamish Fire ...
Residents of a town near Vancouver were on stand-by to evacuate Wednesday as Canada's devastating wildfire season worsened, ...