Lytton city council member Lilliane Graie, on behalf of Mayor Jan Polderman, said in an email on Thursday that the fire had devastated the town, a village about 153km (95 miles) northeast of Vancouver.
“Our people are scattered north and south and we are trying to establish who is where,” she wrote.
At least some of the people who fled Lytton came to a recreational a centre in Lillooet, a town about 63km to the north.
John Haugen, a deputy chief with the Lytton First Nation, said leaders were trying to account for members who did not get to Lillooet.
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“It’s incomprehensible, people are so anxious and worried about what comes next for them,” he said, saying the community had suffered tremendous “devastation and loss”.
Rosanna Stamberg, who lives in Enderby, said she was trying to track down her son and daughter, Alfred and Marjorie Nelson, who live about 8km from the centre of Lytton.
“I don’t know which direction they went. I don’t know if they went down towards Chilliwack. I don’t know if they went to Lillooet. I don’t know if they went to Spencer’s Bridge or Merritt or Kamloops. I have no idea,” she said. “Or if they stayed home.”
She said the lack of mobile phone service had prevented her contacting them. “I’m very worried,” she said.
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In a television appearance, British Columbia Premier John Horgan, said: “Three consecutive days of the highest recorded temperature in Canadian history all happened in Lytton this week. To have a heatwave and a horrific fire is so troubling and so challenging for the people of this community.”
The heat in Lytton set its first national record on Sunday, reaching 45.1 degrees, then set another new high Monday, at 47.9 degrees. After yet another record high on Tuesday, the heat eased to 39 degrees on Wednesday.
Officials said that in the previous 24 hours there had been 62 new fires and 29,000 lightning strikes. The fire near Lytton had grown to around 22,000 acres (9,000 hectares).
Horgan, the premier, said he had heard “antidotal information” that a train might have started the fire but it was too early to say.
“Lytton has been devastated and it will take an extraordinary amount of effort to get that historic location back to what it was,” he said.
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Edith Loring-Kuhanga, an administrator at the Stein Valley Nlakapamux School, said she and fellow board members had to cut short a Zoom interview with a prospective teacher as the fire burned down their block.
She said she initially didn’t pay attention to a siren going off outside, but then got a call from a school board member telling her to flee.
“He said, ‘I’m down here at the fire and you got to leave, grab whatever you can quickly,‘” Loring-Kuhanga recalled.
The wreckage was extensive, she said.
“It was just unbelievable. It was just a nightmare,” she said. “So many community members have lost everything, they just didn’t have time.”
Roughly 15km to the south of Lytton, in the First Nations community of Kanaka Bar, Jean McKay said she and her 22-year-old daughter, Deirdre McKay, started to panic as the smell of smoke grew stronger.
“I was still sitting there and wondering what to pack, emotionally walking out my door but thinking ‘I’m leaving all this behind.’ It’s hard. Very hard,” McKay said. “My daughter phoned before we lost services and stuff, she’s telling us, ‘Get out of there, get out of there.’”
There was one memento her daughter couldn’t leave behind: “She grabbed my dad’s picture off the wall,” McKay said. “I’m telling her, ‘We’re walking out and this is the home we built forever and that you guys grew up in’. It’s harsh.”
Additional reporting by Agence France-Presse
This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: Fire razes town hit by record-breaking heatfire consumes small British Columbia town that hit 121 F