So the heat wave didn't get to you. I know what you mean about the fog. Back when we had an airplane we used to fly over to Tofino and walk down to the beach. It would be CAVU in Vancouver and WOXOF in Tofino until the sun burned the fog off around noon.
We had 3 to 4 days of the wave. Rainfall was also lower than normal in June but we get a fair bit of rain in Junuary as its sometimes called so while it was a warmer and drier we haven't really dried out. Like I said it's positively lush in terms of vegetation.
There are water restrictions in effect in Tofino but that's normal even when it's wet. There's just too many people using a water system that's always trying to catch up to demand it seems. I'm on a well that's never gone dry even during the longest droughts we've had in almost 40 years.
We've certainly had dry hot spells that warrant fire bans and there were times when we couldn't go logging. With the sunniest warmest weather though comes the fog. Almost daily and within a narrow strip right along the coast it often remains moist for hours everyday. Drive inland or up a mountain above the fog and its hot and dry. Of course it's like driving in proverbial pea soup offshore. Its funny watching people in shorts and tee shirts wondering about the crew zipping up and putting gloves on while heading out the harbour. Then we hit the WALL.
As far as I'm aware there's been no record or sign of a natural wildfire on this side of Sutton Pass. Just east of that of course was the Tay or Taylor River fire that was started when a blast by highway construction crews in the 1967 set 2600 hectares ablaze. You can still see gray ghosts sticking up thru the new growth. I've been told 1st Nation's have no recollection of such a thing happening or recorded in their oral histories right along the coast.