BC has had a relatively wet summer, so I can report very little to NO smoke in southern BC this year, even when the Prairie fires are burning. We have had a slight haze drifting up from the many fires burning south of the US border. Here is a visual:
Visitors just travelled the southern route to the West Coast have reported no notable fires, no smoke and are currently enjoying their camping in nature along the Sea to Sky Hwy. I’ve had an eye on the Wesley Fire on Vancouver Island for the past week. It is around 530 ha and growing very slowly compared to the aggressive wildfires we’ve seen the past decade. BC Wildfire Service has designated it as a Fire of Note on their maps to (in their own words) make it easier detectable due to heightened interest under current evacuation order and location. Not to say this fire could not turn aggressive given high winds, but we are into August now with good overnight dew recovery.
I have checked Hwy cams on Vancouver Island in the Parksville area all week and detected little smoke visible….this morning showing visible night precipitation and overcast sky, still little smoke.
Certainly am seeing no reason why the western US States would be complaining about smoke from Canada? Or why our herders would ring bells about smoke toxicity, unless they are clinging to desperation to propagandize a climate disaster narrative - and firing up their lying government propaganda press, the CBC, does lead us into that direction.
Thanks, Doreen. Haze on West Coast is mostly precipitation. We haven’t had a day here without rain in over a week. Check the BC wildfire maps. There aren’t enough fires of sufficient size to cause widespread smoke cover. CBC press is heavily financed by those engineering our culture-changing narratives and is not a trustworthy source. Rain. Check the road cams. Temperatures in the mid 20C. The Prairies and eastern may be a different kettle, but smoke from there has not crossed the Rockies into BC. Eyewitness report.
Thank you, again. I looked at the B.C. wildfire map and agree it is not the source of smoke moving eastward. Everything is being, or has been, weaponized including weather.
Indeed. This is exactly why I advocate for the men and women in this country to speak out when mainstream press reporting is not representative of what they experience at their location. We need a grassroots truth network to counterbalance the fear-mongering and false flags. No intentions to be confrontational.
BC has had a relatively wet summer, so I can report very little to NO smoke in southern BC this year, even when the Prairie fires are burning. We have had a slight haze drifting up from the many fires burning south of the US border. Here is a visual:
https://mediaprogram.maps.arcgis.com/apps/webappviewer/index.html?id=cc2890cca7c240e585d5bfb017ab8563
Visitors just travelled the southern route to the West Coast have reported no notable fires, no smoke and are currently enjoying their camping in nature along the Sea to Sky Hwy. I’ve had an eye on the Wesley Fire on Vancouver Island for the past week. It is around 530 ha and growing very slowly compared to the aggressive wildfires we’ve seen the past decade. BC Wildfire Service has designated it as a Fire of Note on their maps to (in their own words) make it easier detectable due to heightened interest under current evacuation order and location. Not to say this fire could not turn aggressive given high winds, but we are into August now with good overnight dew recovery.
I have checked Hwy cams on Vancouver Island in the Parksville area all week and detected little smoke visible….this morning showing visible night precipitation and overcast sky, still little smoke.
Here is the BC Wildfire map: https://wildfiresituation.nrs.gov.bc.ca/map
Certainly am seeing no reason why the western US States would be complaining about smoke from Canada? Or why our herders would ring bells about smoke toxicity, unless they are clinging to desperation to propagandize a climate disaster narrative - and firing up their lying government propaganda press, the CBC, does lead us into that direction.
Thank you for the update, BRK7_2. Where I live in Ontario is elevated. I can see the western horizon is blurred with a haze of something. The smell of smoke is present albeit mild. Canadian Prairie fires. https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/smoke-prairies-wildfire-air-quality-statements-warning-canada-1.7600463
Thanks, Doreen. Haze on West Coast is mostly precipitation. We haven’t had a day here without rain in over a week. Check the BC wildfire maps. There aren’t enough fires of sufficient size to cause widespread smoke cover. CBC press is heavily financed by those engineering our culture-changing narratives and is not a trustworthy source. Rain. Check the road cams. Temperatures in the mid 20C. The Prairies and eastern may be a different kettle, but smoke from there has not crossed the Rockies into BC. Eyewitness report.
Thank you, again. I looked at the B.C. wildfire map and agree it is not the source of smoke moving eastward. Everything is being, or has been, weaponized including weather.
Indeed. This is exactly why I advocate for the men and women in this country to speak out when mainstream press reporting is not representative of what they experience at their location. We need a grassroots truth network to counterbalance the fear-mongering and false flags. No intentions to be confrontational.