Environment & Energy
Related: About this forumBC's Coastal Fires Have Entered a New Era
https://thetyee.ca/News/2025/08/20/BC-Coastal-Fires-New-Era/The Mount Underwood blaze confirms it. Heres why, and what you can do.
Tyler Olsen / The Tyee
Tyler Olsen is a senior editor at The Tyee. He lives in Lillooet. Find him on Bluesky @tyolsen.bsky.social.
The Mount Underwood fire near Port Alberni wasnt your typical Vancouver Island blaze. But what is normal is changing.
Just hours after the Mount Underwood fire was detected Aug. 11, the blaze had engulfed a mountainside, burning out of control in a region where fires usually stay small and manageable. The fire triggered the evacuation of 400 properties, prompted a local state of emergency, cut off access to the community of Bamfield and sent smoke billowing eastwards.
The blaze eventually grew to more than 3,000 hectares a mammoth fire by Vancouver Island standards.
Historically, fires have been nearly non-existent in coastal B.C., and the playbook for putting them out has been simple: Find fire. Spray water on it. Dig up hot spots. Case closed. This direct attack was possible because of the slow speed at which fires grow in coastal ecosystems.

Bev54
(12,779 posts)professional fire jumpers etc but we did have the very very large water bombers. My Dad was a logger and they all went out to fight the fires. The timber there is a lot bigger and worth a lot of money so they usually will jump on it fast. Loggers rarely worked in the summer because the forests were shut down every year for fire season. It has been much drier than normal there, whereas in Calgary, where I now live, we have not had a full week without rain and have had a lot of rain. That used to be the island.
OKIsItJustMe
(21,650 posts)Climatologists project that we will be receiving more rain (they have for as long as I can remember, and theyve been correct) but we have had a number of droughts. I fear one day I will see the verdant horizon in flames, and not from FRACKing wells over the border in PA.