Two decades later, record wildfires in Kelowna, B.C. are dwarfed by current season
KELOWNA, B.C. — It’s been about five years since Jesse Zeman began a summer ritual of boxing up keepsakes and personal effects to ship to relatives because he worried his home in Kelowna, B.C., would burn down.
Eventually, Zeman said he and his wife moved their treasures permanently after the family had to evacuate twice. Now they have a so-called “go box” prepared and they are ready to leave at a moment’s notice every summer.
They’ve had fires start within a few kilometres of their house many times over the years, but Zeman said he looks back to the devastating season in 2003 when friends’ homes burned down in what was then considered a catastrophic event, but now is the new norm.
“You only need to get woken up at 11 at night because there’s a fire within two kilometres of your house, you only need to do that once to go ‘holy smoke, so this is real,'” he said in an interview. “The risk is very high where we live.”