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Burns Bog
Greater Vancouver Book
This story is from the Greater Vancouver Book by Chuck Davis. You can find more stories from the book or even purchase it here
by Shane McCune
Ask a clutch of coasties to name the Lower Mainland's largest park, and most will come up with Stanley Park, at 400 hectares (1,000 acres) the equal of New York's Central Park.
The most green-spirited might point out, correctly, that Pacific Spirit Park, on the University Endowment Lands, is even bigger, at 750 hectares (1,850 acres).
But the largest green belt in the area is Delta's Burns Bog, at 4,000 hectares the size of 10 Stanley Parks. Occupying a quarter of Delta, south of River Bend and west of Highway 91, it is the largest domed pear bog in North America and one of the largest in the world. It was named after a former owner, Pat Burns of Burns Meat packaging.
The bog is known to biologists around the world, since only three percent of the planet is covered with peatlands. An ancient lake that filled with vegetation over the eons, the bog is choked with trees and bog plants such as sphagnum moss and Labrador tea.
Rain is Burns Bog's only source of water, and its slow evaporation is a major regulator of the region's climate.
The bog covers the largest undeveloped urban area in Canada and the largest wetland in the Fraser River delta. It is home to 24 species of mammals, including beaver, muskrat and Columbian black-tailed deer, 150 species of birds—and the largest garbage dump west of Toronto.
The only protected part is the 60-hectare Delta Nature Reserve. The biggest chunk of Burns Bog, almost 2,300 hectares, is owned by Western Delta Lands Inc., which at various times since the 1970s has sought to develop portions of the bog with a $10 billion superport, a golf course, a 100-room hotel and office complex, and a racetrack. All have been rejected by municipal and/or provincial authorities.
The Burns Bog Conservation Society has been fighting to have the entire area declared an ecological reserve and has been pressing the province to buy the land from WDL. Negotiations broke in the spring of 1996 after the company, owned by the McLaughlin family of Ontario (also owners of Grouse Mountain) turned down an offer of $27.5 million.
Over the years the bog has been shaped and altered by both man and nature. Peat-mining in the 1940s gouged huge holes and drainage ditches in the heart of the bog. During World War II, it was controlled by the U.S. Army which planned to use the peat moss in refining magnesium for artillery shells. Farms have encroached on its periphery and the city of Vancouver dumps its garbage on a landfill in the southern portion. Highway 91, cutting through the eastern edge of the bog, intercepts runoff that once flowed into the bog, and flood control measures designed to protect farms along the Fraser River also prevent the periodic flooding that has watered the bog over the centuries.
The bog has also been the site of serious fires, which can burn underground for months in the methane-rich peat. Major blazes occurred in 1977, 1990 (twice), 1994 and 1996. The 1996 fire covered Greater Vancouver in smoke and ash for two days, destroyed 170 hectares and cost more than $200,000 to extinguish.
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<b-lawg>
Day 4 - TSN turning point
A little drizzle and all viewable flames are about gone. The local police department has stated that they aim to have the fire out today, even if that means digging up earth to ensure it. I am surprised as yesterday 170 hectares were burning. In the meantime, the smoke has cleared and seems to all be at SFU. Bah humbug.
Day 3, morning
Woke up this morning and the smoke was thick. I could barely see down the street. The bog is covered in the eary white smoke. I thought my windows were fogged, no that was the smoke. I heard on the radio that the fire is WAY bigger then they percieved it to be. Initial reports indicated a fire that was 27 hectares. An aerial thermal scan has since revealed that the fire spans about 170 hectares. 170 hectares!!
Day 2 Recap
I was up at SFU throughout most of the day. The view from up top the mountain is usually fabulous, but after a day of bog fires, all that smoke has blocked all visibility off the mountain. I got home really late at night to notice that winds have shifted. The smoke in my neighbourhoud is thick, and the bog is hidden by this eary white smoke.
Burns Bog Fire Day 2 Updates
Burns Bog Fire Day 2 From what I can see from my window, the fire has been pushed back significantly. It has been pushed almost back to the origin, although it seems to be moving west towards the farmland. Hopefully this will be taken care of soon. A little help from Mother Nature and that rain that we all love should stomp the fire out.
 After this picture the fires have died down significantly. The wind has stopped blowing. Firefighters expect it to take a week to stop this fire. The real question is what started it?? Pictures taken from my house!
 Nightfall. Although it's dark, you can see the flames keep on burning. The fire is reaching about 2 miles and is still burning to the left of the picture. I should have taken a panoramic. Pictures taken from my house!
 Dusk has fallen and the fire crews are pulling out. There's not much more they can do. As you can see, the fire is actually getting closer. The fire continues to grow. Pictures taken from my house!
 And then it spread right(north) as the wind was blowing. Spread right into the heart of the bog. Pictures taken from my house!
 The sun is peaking through... Taken just after the previous pic. The sun was blocked out for most of the day until nightfall because of the smoke. Pictures taken from my house!
 This was at the beginning of the fire. Pictures taken from my house!
Burns Bog is on Fire
The flames seem to be slowing down. The water bombers dropped flame retardant stuff on the edges and the wind has died further aiding the cause. I have all the pics and will be uploading using the picasa + hello + blogger bot features.
</b-lawg>
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