Image: BC Wildfire Service.
Multiple structures at Blue Lake Resort

Multiple structures at Blue Lake Resort in the Fraser Canyon destroyed

Jul 9, 2026 | 8:51 AM

BOSTON BAR — A raging wildfire complex near Boston Bar, B.C., has destroyed a number of buildings and has grown significantly to almost 200 square kilometres.

Video posted online by the Shayne Findlay, the operator of Blue Lake Resort, show a number of structures left in charred ruins, although the main lodge appears to have survived.

For years, Blue Lake Resort, north of Boothroyd, has been a summer destination in the Fraser Canyon. Now, parts of it are gone, according to a report from Global BC reporter Amy Judd.

“I had a webcam set up at the office,” Shayne Findlay from the resort, said. “I had a backup generator, so I was able to watch my buildings burn down.”

Findlay said that flames damaged multiple structures at the resort and the financial loss is significant.

“It’s done. We’re done. We lost too much,” he said. “We’re packing it in for the summer, and we’ll have to see what we can look like next year.”

Overnight, the Fraser Valley Regional District upgraded an evacuation alert to an order to leave for about 40 properties.

The Thompson-Nicola Regional District meanwhile issued an evacuation alert for about 61 properties, telling residents to be ready to leave on short notice, in the area near Prospect Creek.

Hundreds of properties in the Fraser Canyon area were already under evacuation orders and alerts as the Brunswick Creek and Ainslie Creek wildfires burn out of control on both sides of the Fraser River.

The BC Wildfire Service says the Ainslie Creek blaze has grown to 170 square kilometres in size, while the Brunswick Creek fire is measured at 26 square kilometres.

The combined size of the two fires, now known as the Brunswick Complex, is up 72 per cent from the 114 square kilometres reported Wednesday.

Highway 1 through the region remains closed while crews say strong winds have driven the fire’s growths in the last two days, with more gusts are in the forecast for the next several days “with no appreciable rain in the short-term forecast.”

This report by The Canadian Press was first published July 9, 2026.

The Canadian Press