Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Manchester Evening News
Manchester Evening News
National
Guy Bell

Three-day-long moor fire was started by man who set off firework in front of his girlfriend

A huge fire which torched 285 hectares of moorland and took three days to put out was started by a man who set off a firework in front of his girlfriend, a court heard.

Viktor Riedly, had intended to record the bang caused by the firecracker he had hauled to the top of Marsden Moor, between Oldham and Huddersfield, when it sparked a 60-hour fire and a response from 100 firefighters, YorkshireLive reports.

The 28-year-old, from Huddersfield, West York, tried to put out the fire with a two-litre bottle of water and threw mud at it in a bid to stop it spreading, Leeds Crown Court heard.

Prosecutor Eddison Flint told the court that Riedly's moorland stunt cost the council £400,000 and fire crews spent three continuous days trying to put the blaze out.

READ MORE:

Eighteen fire engines and six specialist units - including additional crews from Greater Manchester - arrived at the scene on April 25 this year, Mr Flint added.

It was revealed that Riedly's intention had been to record the firecracker being set off and his girlfriend had carried the recording equipment up the moorland.

Mr Flint said that Riedly had used a shield to protect himself from sparks but soon realised something had gone wrong.

He then used the wooden shield to try and put out the initial fire having failed in his attempts with the water from a bottle - but that too caught alight.

Mr Flint said the couple realised the fire was spreading too quickly and went to ask for help.

Anastasis Tasou, defending, added that Riedly did everything he could to put out the fire including using his own clothing in bid for it to be extinguished.

Riedly, of Henry Street, Huddersfield, admitted one count of arson but his sentencing was adjourned as the Record Jeremy Hill-Baker wanted to hear evidence from witnesses.

The fire at night on Marsden Moor (© Adam Vaughan)

The next hearing will take place at the same court on February 25.

Torrential rain fell on the wider Huddersfield area at around 7.30pm on April 28, helping to finally extinguish the three-and-a-half mile long stretch of burning peat and grass.

Crews remained on the moors overnight to check no fires re-ignited and monitoring continued for the days that followed.

Sign up to the MEN email newsletters to get the latest on sport, news, what's on and more by following this link

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.