Canada

Boston Bar, B.C., residents look on as wildfire burns near small highway community

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Two out-of-control wildfires burning north of Boston Bar continue to threaten homes and have kept Highway 1 closed through the Fraser Canyon

Jagdip Singh Bihal says he’s opening his highway-side restaurant in Boston Bar, B.C., earlier than usual to accommodate wildfire crews battling blazes near the small community.

The Ainsley Creek wildfire that’s roughly 170 square kilometres in size started earlier this month and is considered out of control, as is the nearby Brunswick Creek blaze of more than 25 square kilometres.

Bihal runs JB’s Drive-In Restaurant, just a few hundred metres down Highway 1, where the route has been closed due to the fires spreading with high winds on either side of the Fraser River.

Bihal says the fires turned ugly over the last week as the winds picked up, and he’s not seen anything like it in the four years he’s been running the diner.

Wildfire crews battle pair of out of control blazes in the small highway side community of Boston Bar, B.C., as residents and business owners look on as the thumping rhythm of helicopters cuts through the smoke-filled air, dropping water to douse the wind-fed flames. (July 10, 2026)

Fernando Balanta has been staying with a friend in Boston Bar for a couple weeks, and a trip to the dump last week became “surreal” when they spotted the start of a blaze near North Bend, where residents have since fled, with evacuation orders and alerts covering hundreds of properties.

The Ainslie Creek wildfire north of Boston Bar, B.C., is shown in this handout photo provided by BC Wildfire Service, on Tuesday, July 7, 2026. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Handout — BC Wildfire Service (Mandatory Credit) The Ainslie Creek wildfire north of Boston Bar, B.C., is shown in this handout photo provided by BC Wildfire Service, on Tuesday, July 7, 2026. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Handout — BC Wildfire Service (Mandatory Credit)

Balanta says the fire has made things “a bit nerve wracking,” and he worries about his friend’s children, peoples’ properties and their pets.

He says many people in the community have already packed up and left, and he and his cohort are packed and ready to leave if the fire situation worsens, but for now he’s staying put and documenting the blaze for his YouTube channel.

“People are pretty mixed up,” Balanta told The Canadian Press. “I think everybody’s just hoping for the best.”

Bihal said he couldn’t get a supplier to deliver to his restaurant, so he sent people to Surrey in his own van to stock up, as fire crews have frequented the diner while in town.

He said it’s been scary for much of the town.

“Hopefully it’s going to rain and help us,” Bihal said.

A building at Blue Lake Resort that burned down in the Brunswick complex wildfires near Boston Bar is pictured. (Courtesy: Shayne Findlay) A building at Blue Lake Resort that burned down in the Brunswick complex wildfires near Boston Bar is pictured. (Courtesy: Shayne Findlay)

This report by Darryl Greer, The Canadian Press, was first published July 10, 2026.