Month of April eases drought ahead of warmer weather

Published on April 28, 2026 at 6:42 AM

After near-record snowpack levels this winter, Environment Canada says April brought favourable conditions to help ease the ongoing drought situation in northeast B.C.

Meteorologist Brian Proctor says cities like Dawson Creek and Fort St. John. had about 27 centimetres of snow on the ground at the beginning of April. Fort Nelson checked in at approx. 35 centimetres accumulation.

He says the snow has been melting at a pace of one to two centimetres a day.

“We really had a best-case scenario for most of the month. We had a gradual melt — it wasn’t overwhelming and it didn’t hit really hard, really quick,” Proctor said.

A gradual melt allows water more time to infiltrate the soil and recharge moisture levels.

According to the province’s drought map, the current drought level is moderate in the East Peace Region, which includes Dawson Creek. In other areas such as Fort Nelson and Fort St. John, the drought rating has maintained a level of two to three. 

The long-range forecast is pointing toward warmer and drier conditions in the coming months. This week, the forecast calls for temperatures nearing 20 degrees.

-with files from Noah Abel/CJDC

Add comment

Comments

There are no comments yet.