Golden, B.C., residents recount 'harrowing' wildfire experience
CBC
B.C. resident Stewart Eldridge felt like he was in a war zone.
Eldridge, who lives just outside of Golden in the Kootenay region, works for an Airbnb property management company. On Wednesday, he had just started eating dinner when he received a text requesting he help his boss with fire preparation at one of the company's units located south of the town. Within 15 minutes of being there, he saw the advancing Dogtooth FSR wildfire.
"We literally watched the entire mountainside just lit on fire," he told CBC's Radio West.
As they fled, Eldridge said the heat felt like it was climbing five degrees every five minutes. He now considers himself lucky that his truck's tires didn't melt into the asphalt.
Still, Eldridge and his boss decided to stop and help a horse get off a field as they drove through Parson, a community around 35 kilometres south of Golden. But the fire was hot on their track and quickly reached the same field.
It also jumped Highway 95.
"[Firefighters] were screaming at us, they were like 'evacuate now, evacuate now!'" Eldridge said. "I've never been through anything like that in my life."
Discovered on July 22, the Dogtooth blaze is one of five wildfires in the province that are highly visible or pose a potential threat to public safety, according to the B.C. Wildfire Service (BCWS). It's suspected to have been caused by lightning and measured 54.45 square kilometres as of Thursday evening.
On Wednesday night, the fire forced authorities to evacuate around 100 properties south of Golden and closed the highway in both directions between the town and Radium Hot Springs.
The fire also destroyed six homes near the town, according to Golden Mayor Ron Oszust.
"It was like Armageddon," said Brian Harris, fire chief of Nicholson, a community around seven kilometres south of the town. His department was responding to the blaze. "The sky was just black. The winds were howling."
Since then, local officials said the conditions have improved thanks to some rain and cooling weather.
By Thursday afternoon, Golden had downgraded the evacuation order for some properties on the east side of Highway 95 to an alert. The highway has also reopened.
"We're pleased with the change of weather to help us with this fire," Karen Cathcart told CBC's Radio West. She's the director of Electoral Area A, which covers the rural area surrounding Golden.
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