First look inside town turned to ‘powder’ by record-breaking heatwave
The Independent was the first international news outlet to be allowed into the destroyed town of Lytton, British Columbia. Ashleigh Stewart joined residents seeing the extent of the destruction for the first time
Go Pro footage taken inside Lytton, in Canada’s British Columbia, shows the remains of a town residents described as a “special place” where “every takes care of each other”.
In place of homes once filled with people, and a lifetime’s worth of possessions, there is nothing but charred rubble. Video, take by The Independent, shows structures reduced to dust, ash scattered across the road, trees split apart by heat.
Objects once used by families are virtually unidentifiable, save for a few items that no doubt will take on a poignant significance for the families who revisited the charred remains of their homes this week.
All of Edith Loring-Kuhanga’s most prized possessions have been reduced to ash. Nothing remains of her home, other than the wire fence that runs around it, a large tree on the front of the property and an oil tank at the back. The rest is debris and charred earth.
And yet, the Lytton resident says seeing the remains of her home, and the decimated town around it, was a “tough but necessary” experience.
The small village was destroyed by a fire just days after it broke the record for Canada’s all-time highest temperature for three days in a row, reaching 121.1F (49.5C).
Lytton was among a number of areas in the Pacific Northwest that saw extreme heat over the last month; with places in across the border in California, Oregon and Washington in the US also breaking their own temperature records and reporting hundreds of deaths believed to be linked to the extreme heat.
Caused by what meteorologists have described as a “heat dome” of high pressure over the Pacific Northwest and Canada’s British Columbia, the impact has been worsened by human-caused climate change.
Many Lytton residents on Friday returned to the town for the first time since fleeing the oncoming flames, to observe what remained. The Thompson-Nicola Regional District arranged buses to take evacuees, and a media contingent including The Independent, back into the town on a tightly controlled tour.
Loring-Kuhanga was one of those residents.
The school administrator for the Stein Valley Nlakapamux School, a First Nations school in Lytton, escaped the fire and helped set up the muster station at the local high school for evacuees. She then fled the town to Lillooet and is now staying in a hotel in Langley.
She says seeing the remains of the town was cathartic.