British Columbia

'We're waiting for a frost': northeast B.C. loggers, truckers at standstill as muddy roads cause problems

Unseasonably warm and wet weather has truckers and loggers in northeast B.C. praying for a winter freeze to make it possible to drive on muddy service roads.

Until roads freeze, it's impossible to drive on Peace region backroads

truck on icy highway
Cold weather is needed to freeze the dirt service roads that connect highways to remote logging sites and oil and gas fields, says the Northern B.C. Truckers Association. (Joanne Stassen/CBC)

Loggers, oil and gas workers and truckers in B.C.'s Peace region are waiting for a frost to unfreeze the economy in northeast B.C.

"We're really seeing all those industries right now in a wait-and-see and waiting for frost," said Kathleen Connelly of the Dawson Creek Chamber of Commerce. 

"I hate to say it, but we need snow and we need some cold."

With no frost, they've just made the roads so soft these trucks are sinking out of sight- Gary McLeod, Northern B.C. Truckers Association

Cold weather is needed to freeze the dirt service roads that connect highways to remote logging sites and oil and gas fields. Without sub-zero temperatures, the roads have turned to mud, making them too difficult for large trucks and heavy equipment to navigate.

"With no frost, they've just made the roads so soft these trucks are sinking out of sight," said Gary McLeod, business manager for the Northern B.C. Truckers Association. 

"It usually takes a lot of rain and stuff to make these roads soft, and we've just had no frost in our area at all."

McLeod estimates the forest industry is about a month behind schedule due to the delays.

Grain harvest also suffering

The weather-related problems come on the heels of a record-setting snowfall in October which shook up another northeast B.C. industry: agriculture. 

Rick Kantz, of the B.C. Grain Producers Association, says snow has forced farmers across the Peace region in northeastern B.C to leave anywhere between 10 to 20 per cent of their crop in the fields. (Dave Gilson/CBC)

Rick Kantz, of the B.C. Grain Producer's Association, said up to 20 per cent of the harvest in the Peace had to be left in the fields due to the unusual weather.

"This is probably the most severe one-off weather condition that I can remember in the last 40 years," he said.

Connelly said there is positive news as demand for Peace-region products is still in place, it's just a matter of being able to get them to market.

 "Once things freeze up, those jobs are still there. The opportunities are still there," she said. "Lots of those projects are just waiting on weather."

"Everybody's watching the forecast very carefully in the northeast right now."


For more on this story click on the audio labeled: 'We desperately need frost: why Dawson Creek businesses are hoping for more cold.'

For more stories from northern British Columbia follow Daybreak North on Facebook and Twitter and subscribe to the podcast.