Wildfire near Glenshane Pass extinguished

Ten fire appliances attended the fire on the Glenshane Road in Maghera
- Published
Firefighters have been tackling a gorse fire near the Glenshane Pass in Maghera, County Londonderry.
At the height of the incident, 10 fire appliances and 75 firefighters were in attendance on the Glenshane Road.
The Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI) had advised motorists to avoid the road because of the blaze.
In an operational update on Sunday morning, the Northern Ireland Fire and Rescue Service (NIFRS) said the fire was extinguished on Saturday night and operations ceased at about 23:00 BST.
The NIFRS said its staff attended 49 wildfires on Friday and 26 fires on Saturday.
It added that they "continued to respond to a number of other emergency incidents across the night", while on Saturday firefighters were called to a road traffic collision in Castlewellan, County Down, and an agricultural shed fire in Downpatrick.

NIFRS western area commander David Doherty said the blaze in Maghera was a "particularly complicated incident for us to tackle"
NIFRS western area commander David Doherty said the Glenshane Road fire was about "a mile up the mountain with no vehicular access, so it's a particularly complicated incident for us to tackle".
Mr Doherty said it had been "an extremely busy" week for the fire service.
"I've just come from the far side of Lisnaskea, 70 miles away, from another incident, as have many of the crews," he said.
"It's not just this incident. There are various incidents ongoing.
"It's very tough on our resources and our firefighters have been pushed to the limits.
"It's been pushing one of the busiest weeks we've had."
Meanwhile, the Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI) said firefighters "were stoned and withdrew to prevent personal injury" while attending a "large fire" in the Colin Glen Forest Park in west Belfast.
In the post on social media, a spokesperson said: "Officers from west Belfast Neighbourhood Policing Team attended a short time later and dispersed a crowd of juveniles.
"Police discovered flammable material brought into the forest park, which had been used to set the fire."

The car park of the Ponderosa bar and restaurant has become a makeshift command centre for the Fire Service
BBC News NI reporter Catherine Morrison reporting from the scene
The car park of the Ponderosa bar and restaurant has become a makeshift command centre for the fire service.
Smoke from the fires can be seen for miles around - there are four separate blazes which firefighters are currently struggling to get under control, the fire front is three miles long.
They're in a fairly inaccessible location in the Sperrin Mountains, about an hours climb for firefighters, burdened with equipment.
The Ponderosa is open, customers are having lunch as firefighters come and go outside.

Thirty-three firefighters are in attendance at the fire on the Glenshane Road
The NIFRS said: "With the weather warning still in place, we are appealing to the public to adhere to our fire safety advice.
"Please stay vigilant to fire in the countryside. If you see a fire, call 999."
On Friday, the fire service confirmed its staff attended 1,112 incidents from Thursday 3 April to Thursday 10 April, 296 of which were wildfires.
They said many were started deliberately.
Meanwhile, the National Trust has warned that some wildlife will be negatively affected by a spate of recent wildfires on the Mourne Mountains.
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