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Summer snow forecasted for B.C. Interior highways
Summer snow forecasted for B.C. Interior highways

CTV News

timean hour ago

  • Climate
  • CTV News

Summer snow forecasted for B.C. Interior highways

Friday may be the first day of summer, but there is snow in the forecast for some highways in B.C.'s Interior. Environment Canada says wet snow is possible at higher elevations on the Coquihalla Highway from Hope to Merritt, the Okanagan Connector from Merritt to Kelowna and Highway 3 from Hope to Princeton and from Paulson Summit to Kootenay Pass. Up to four centimetres is predicted to accumulate between Friday night and Saturday afternoon. 'Because of the convective nature of the system, snow levels may temporarily lower to 1,200 (to) 1,600 metres as intense bands of precipitation move through,' reads a special weather statement. 'Snowfall accumulations will be highly variable depending on elevation. Be prepared to adjust your driving with changing road conditions.' Along with the forecasted snow, Environment Canada is warning of severe thunderstorms and heavy rain Friday and Saturday in a large section of the interior. A severe thunderstorm watch is in effect for the Okanagan, the Fraser Canyon, Shuswap, Boundary, Nicola, Similkameen and Yoho and Kootenay parks. 'Don't drive through flooded roadways. Heavy rain can cause flash flooding and significant reductions to visibility,' the alert reads. The agency predicts up to 40 millimetres of rain by Saturday afternoon in the affected regions.

12 more temperature records broken in B.C. as hot weather persists
12 more temperature records broken in B.C. as hot weather persists

CBC

time10-06-2025

  • Climate
  • CBC

12 more temperature records broken in B.C. as hot weather persists

Another dozen temperature records have fallen in B.C. thanks to the ongoing spell of warm weather brought to the province by a ridge of high pressure. Monday was also the third day in a row that the hottest spot in Canada was in B.C. Osoyoos claimed that title when it hit 36.7 C on Monday afternoon, a new daily record for the Okanagan community. Other areas where the 12 temperature records were set included Trail, which reached 36.6 C, and Castlegar, which hit 36.4 C and broke a record set in 1918. Environment Canada says the "early season heat event" that brought 15 daily records on Sunday will persist in some areas of the province, including the South Coast and parts of Vancouver Island, the southwestern Interior and western parts of the Kootenays. There are 26 special weather statements in place for southern B.C., with daily high temperatures expected to remain in the high 20s to low 30s in some coastal areas Tuesday, reaching into the mid-to-high 30s in the Interior.

BC winemakers adjust for ‘scary' future beyond their control
BC winemakers adjust for ‘scary' future beyond their control

National Observer

time09-06-2025

  • Climate
  • National Observer

BC winemakers adjust for ‘scary' future beyond their control

It was impossible to miss the pride in winemaker Leandro Nosal's voice as he described the "more complex and a little more generous" flavours in his 2024 vintage of Okanagan sauvignon blanc at a late May wine tasting in Vancouver. The wine was the progeny of a hard year, he explained. In January 2024, a brutal cold snap hit the Okanagan Valley after weeks of unseasonably warm weather. The extreme weather devastated the valley's vineyards — as well as orchards of peaches, plums, and apricots — killing thousands of vines and wiping out close to 98 per cent of the grape harvest. Nosal's winery, Tinhorn Creek, in Oliver, BC, lost about half of its vines; those that didn't die produced a minuscule crop. Desperate for grapes, he looked south, hunting for vineyards in Washington and Oregon that grew the same varieties, in similar environments — and had enough of a surplus to provide him the raw ingredients for his 2024 vintages. The difficulties didn't stop there. Wine's distinct flavours are shaped by the land ('terroir') where the grapes grow, how they're handled during and after the harvest, and how the winemaker decides to ferment the grape juice and age the wine. It was a challenge producing a wine that still echoed the vineyard's general theme with new grapes, from a new terroir, with different qualities and unfamiliar limitations. "We had to learn a lot, very fast," said Nosal. "That's what makes wine so interesting, is that you have endless combinations or different factors and you can create many different things." That kind of creativity is poised to become critical in years to come as the climate crisis deepens. Extreme weather — cold snaps, extreme heat, storms, wildfires — are becoming more common across Canada. The stakes are high: BC's wine industry alone is worth about $3.7 billion, and the extreme weather will harm other crops as well. Climate models show that agricultural regions across the country will see drier summers and increased precipitation in winter and spring, driving flooding and droughts. Erratic temperature swings like the Okanagan 2024 cold snap and the 2021 heat dome are also poised to become more common, stressing crops, farmers and farm workers. In January 2024, a brutal cold snap hit the Okanagan Valley after weeks of unseasonably warm weather. The extreme weather devastated the valley's vineyards, wiping out close to 98 per cent of the grape harvest and forcing winemakers to adapt. Those concerns are top of mind for Nosal and other Okanagan farmers — entire vineyards, wiped out by extreme weather, devastating the livelihoods of farmers, farm workers and winemakers. An industry that draws over a million tourists to rural parts of the province each year — gone. "The first word that comes to mind is 'anxiety,'" said Nosal. Hits on all sides The 2021 heat dome was a pivotal moment. Many growers in the region felt that "nothing was the same" after it, Nosal recalls. Temperatures soared well above 40°C, which forced the grapes to stop photosynthesizing and ripening fruit, harming the wine and the plants' long-term health. The heat is brutal for employees, many of them temporary foreign workers who come to BC each summer from Mexico, Jamaica and a handful of other countries. On Nosal's vineyard, people have started working very early in the morning during the summer, with the goal of wrapping up the day by noon to escape extreme heat. Exposure to extreme heat can cause dehydration, heat exhaustion and heat stroke, particularly for farm workers who spend their days doing hard, physical labour under a beating sun. Worksafe BC, the province's workplace safety insurer, reported that compensation claims spiked by 180 per cen t during the 2021 heat dome. Then there's wildfire smoke: Recent years have seen record-breaking fires sweep across Canada and the Okanagan, smothering both in a thick pall of smoke. Beyond harming people, smoke penetrates grape skins, giving the finished wine a strong, unpleasant smoky flavour known as 'smoke taint.' A fire's proximity to the vineyard, combined with the ripeness of the grapes, will influence how much smoke gets imparted into the wine, but with increasingly unpredictable fires and smoke patterns, winemakers need to be ready for the worst, said Nosal. It is possible to remove smoke taint from the wine after it is fermented by running it through a high-tech filter system that retains the smoke molecules. But the technology is expensive, he said, impacting wine prices and making it hard to access for smaller growers. Farmers across Canada are facing similar problems because of extreme weather, said Evan Fraser, a professor at the University of Guelph and director of the Arrell Food Institute. While technologies, like smoke filters or massive shade nets, can help them adapt to many of these more erratic conditions, using them extensively risks increasing food prices. And unless governments do more to tackle housing costs and wages, widespread adoption of the technologies could send food insecurity in Canada soaring, he said. "We're picking at the proverbial Gordian knot of problems," he said. What makes a wine from BC? It is no small matter to slap a made-in-BC sticker on a bottle of wine. A maze of rules largely determined by the Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA) control what winemakers can put on their labels: wines made in BC from BC-grown grapes have one designation, the VQA. Wines blended in Canada have another. Wines made with non-BC grapes have yet another. That system was thrown into disarray in 2024, when winemakers like Nosal had to source grapes from vineyards outside the region, and sometimes even fermented those wines outside BC. Labelling those wines appropriately was essential to maintain consumer trust, but winemakers weren't sure how to do it, explained Courtney Henderson, marketing director at VQA wines for Andrew Peller Ltd. "There was a lot of navigation around this project in general," she said, noting the problem was new for the industry. After months of lobbying, the agency gave the industry more clear guidelines last August — after most wineries had already placed orders for labels modified to reflect the 2024 vintage's unique characteristics. Most of the labels already complied with the guidelines, but it was a preview of a real conversation that will become more common. While all of BC's vineyards are facing similar challenges from a changed climate, the smaller ones are poised to suffer the most, explained John Janmaat, an environmental economist at the University of British Columbia Okanagan. Take the 2024 cold snap. The weather event hit smaller, more vulnerable wineries that were just scraping by, forcing many to consider selling out to larger operations that could afford to replant and adapt to extreme weather and smoke, he said. It's not just happening in the wine industry; Statistics Canada reported last year that the average farm size in Canada almost doubled in the past 50 years due to consolidation. Critics say consolidation gives large companies too much influence over what is grown, and how, with impacts on food prices, farm workers' welfare and what kind of farming is prioritized. Climate isn't solely responsible for that shift: technological advances have made larger farms possible, while the soaring cost of farmland has made it hard for young people to buy land and start their own operations. But the climate crisis is exacerbating that dynamic by making smaller farms, which are already vulnerable, more likely to fold, said Janmaat. For Nosal, those broader issues are framed by the more immediate challenge of adapting his craft in the coming years. In the meantime, he's relishing the sight of new growth in the Okanagan's vineyards after last year's devastation.

Motorcyclist driving 187 km/h arrested near Kelowna, RCMP say
Motorcyclist driving 187 km/h arrested near Kelowna, RCMP say

CTV News

time07-06-2025

  • CTV News

Motorcyclist driving 187 km/h arrested near Kelowna, RCMP say

An out of focus motorcycle is seen in this undated stock image. (Mohsan Ali Mirza/ Mounties in Kelowna say they arrested and charged a motorcyclist after a number of attempts to stop him as he sped along the Okanagan Connector. The driver was first spotted by Merritt Highway Patrol speeding on Highway 97 C Friday afternoon, according to police. The detachment didn't chase the man and instead radioed the Kelowna Integrated Road Safety Unit to advise the motorcycle was heading towards them. Around 4:30 p.m. police in Peachland clocked the motorcycle travelling 187 km/h, the RCMP says. 'Along with the high rate of speed, the suspect was weaving in and out of traffic, passing vehicles in an unsafe manner, potentially putting innocent people at risk,' reads a news release issued Saturday. Officers attempted to stop the bike but were unsuccessful, and again radioed ahead to another road safety member who saw the driver heading into West Kelowna. At the intersection of Highway 97 and Gellatly Road, officers caught up to the bike and positioned police vehicles in front of it to stop the man, according to the release. 'While an attempt was made to flee, police were able to pull the rider from the stationary motorcycle, where he was quickly arrested for dangerous driving and flight from police,' it continues. Video obtained by Castanet shows the motorcyclist lying on the ground with an officer sitting on top of him. Police say they impounded the motorcycle and the driver has been charged with excessive speeding, failing to stop for police, and driving without consideration in addition to other offences under the Motor Vehicle Act. 'Thanks to Merritt and Kelowna Highway Patrol, Kelowna IRSU and Kelowna frontline officers, this dynamic situation was brought to a quick and safe resolution. There were no reported injuries,' the news release concludes.

Kelowna man charged with breaking and entering, RCMP say
Kelowna man charged with breaking and entering, RCMP say

CTV News

time07-06-2025

  • CTV News

Kelowna man charged with breaking and entering, RCMP say

A suspect is captured on surveillance video breaking into a home in this image handed out by the Kelowna RCMP. Charges have been laid against a Kelowna resident accused of breaking into a home earlier this month, Mounties announced Friday. Around 6:15 a.m. on June 1, a man was caught on surveillance camera breaking into a home in the 600 block of Okanagan Boulevard, according to police. When the suspect was arrested for the incident, he was allegedly in possession of an e-bike that was reportedly stolen in another break-and-enter, from a garage in the 800 block of Fuller Avenue. Online court records indicate the arrest happened the day after the break-in. Adam James Hillner, 44, now faces charges of breaking and entering and possession of stolen property under $5,000. He is not in custody and his next court appearance is scheduled for June 12, according to the records. The Kelowna RCMP asked residents to report any incidents of theft by calling 250-762-3300.

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