Stage and crowd at the very start of the night. The crowd increased another 30% in size over the next half hour!

THANK YOU to all those involved with the ancient forest rally!

On Thursday, Oct. 20th, the Ancient Forest Alliance held our “Rally and Info Night for BC’s Ancient Forests and Forestry Jobs” and what an incredible night with a great turnout of nearly 400 people! See the photo gallery here.
The Ancient Forest Alliance would like to extend a HUGE THANKS to;
– The HUNDREDS of dedicated supporters who attended and stood up for the protection of BC’s ancient forests and forestry jobs.

– Local musician Vince Vaccaro for playing his great new song “Silence in the Trees”. Listen here: https://vincevaccaro.bandcamp.com/track/silence-in-the-trees 

– The great speakers and presenters;

Gisele Martin Tlaoquiaht cultural educator and tourism operator

Robert Morales – Hul’qumi’num Chief Treaty Negotiator

Judith Sayers Hupacasath member and UVic adjunct professor

Jens Wieting – Sierra Club of BC campaigner

Arnold Bercov Pulp, Paper, and Woodworkers of Canada president (local 8) 

Norm Macdonald – MLA for Columbia River-Revelstoke and Opposition Critic for Forestry 

Ken Wu & TJ Watt– Ancient Forest Alliance co-founders

– Kim Old from Kold Design for creating the awesome event poster!

– James at PosterLoop Media for displaying our rally poster around town.

– Metropol Print Shop for donating their time to get our hardcopy posters up on all the poster poles in Victoria.

– And all of the volunteers who phoned and invited our supporters, put posters up all over town, and helped setup the night of the event!

THANK YOU ALL!!!

 

 

RALLY for ANCIENT FORESTS and BC FORESTRY JOBS! Thursday, Oct. 20th

YOUR participation will send an undeniable message to Christy Clark’s BC Liberal government that they MUST act during the next 18 months before a BC election to protect British Columbia’s ancient forests and ensure sustainable forestry jobs!

Date:          Thursday, October 20, 2011
Time:          7:00-8:30 pm
Location:     Alix Goolden Hall, 907 Pandora St., Victoria

Join a diverse range of speakers on the need to protect British Columbia’s ancient forests and ensure sustainable forestry jobs.

Speakers include:

Ken Wu & TJ WattAncient Forest Alliance co-founders

Robert Morales – Hul’qumi’num Chief Treaty Negotiator

Gisele Martin Tlaoquiaht cultural educator and tourism operator

Judith Sayers Hupacasath member and UVic adjunct professor

Jens Wieting – Sierra Club of BC campaigner

Arnold Bercov Pulp, Paper, and Woodworkers of Canada president (local 8)

Annette Tanner WCWC Mid-Island Chair

British Columbia’s old-growth forests are highly endangered by industrial logging, with tens of thousands of hectares being clearcut each year. See “before” and “after” maps of Vancouver Island at:
https://16.52.162.165/ancient-forests/before-after-old-growth-maps/

The decline in coastal forestry employment has been fundamentally driven in recent decades by the depletion of the biggest, best old-growth stands in the valley bottoms and lower elevations, resulting in diminishing returns as trees get smaller and more expensive to reach.

Meanwhile the BC government has done nothing to ensure that forest companies retool coastal sawmills to handle smaller second-growth logs, let alone invest in value-added manufacturing facilities. Instead, while mills close, the BC government has been allowing a mass exodus of raw logs to leave for foreign mills – including over 1.1 million cubic meters of raw logs to China last year despite earlier assurances that “lumber, not logs” would be exported.

The unsustainable depletion of old-growth forests has not only resulted in the loss of forestry jobs, but also increasing numbers of endangered species, collapsing wild salmon stocks, the massive release of carbon into the atmosphere, and the steady erosion of many First Nations cultures which evolved in and are supported by old-growth forests.

Support the call for protection of old-growth forests, sustainable second-growth forestry, an end to raw log exports, and the implementation of First Nations land use plans.

YOUR participation is VITAL!

Please forward far and wide!
Also please confirm how many people you’re bringing to help us get a sense of our numbers by emailing us at info@16.52.162.165

Or visit our Facebook Event page and click attend:
https://www.facebook.com/#!/event.php?eid=288068437869909

For more info contact: info@16.52.162.165

 

*** NOTE: If you haven’t recently, PLEASE WRITE a LETTER to the BC government and your local BC Liberal or NDP Member of the Legislative Assembly (MLA) calling on the BC government to devise a plan to:

– Immediately protect BC’s most endangered forests, such as valley bottom ancient rainforests like the Avatar Grove, our Coastal Douglas fir forests, and Inland Old-Growth Rainforests.
-Undertake a comprehensive Provincial Old-Growth Strategy that will inventory and ban and quickly phase-out logging of endangered old-growth forests through the province.
– Ensure the sustainable logging of second-growth forests.
– Ban the export of raw logs to foreign mills.
– Implement new land use plans to expand protected areas based on First Nations land use plans, conservation biology-based scientific assessments, and climate change mitigation strategies.

Write to:
Premier Christy Clark (premier@gov.bc.ca)
Steve Thomson, Minister of Forests, Lands and Natural Resource Operations (for.minister@gov.bc.ca)

Find your local MLA’s address at [Original article no longer available]

Or use our online Letter-Writing Form at:
https://16.52.162.165/write-letter.php

And please sign and forward our online petition at: ancientforestalliance.org/ways-to-take-action-for-forests/petition/

Poster - please feel free to print and pass along to anyone who might be interested!

Slideshow: Saving our Spectacular Ancient Forests! Wed, Oct. 12th

Wednesday, October 12th, 7pm-8:30pm

Room 7000, SFU Harbour Centre (515 W Hastings, Vancouver)

Join Ken Wu, TJ Watt, and Hannah Carpendale of the Ancient Forest Alliance for a slideshow tour through Vancouver Island’s spectacular ancient rainforests, featuring several of the newest images by photographer TJ Watt. Learn about the ecology and politics of BC’s endangered ancient forests, and find out how to get involved in the campaign to save them as the organization embarks on a fall mobilization for ancient forests and to end raw log exports.

Visit our Facebook Events page and click to attend:
https://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=240986749285512

For more info, please contact hannah@15.222.255.145

Feel free to print our posters and pass on to anyone who might be interested!

Hope to see you there!

Move by Liberals to amend Forest Act draws criticism

The provincial government has introduced legislation to allow woodlot owners the right to remove their lands from forest management requirements and sell them while retaining their tenure on Crown lands, similar to a controversial move four years ago that allowed large forest companies the same right on Vancouver Island.

The Liberals introduced the change Tuesday as an amendment to the Forest Act, stating in a news release that woodlot owners will be able to remove private land from their woodlots, at the discretion of the minister, to provide them “flexibility in managing their assets in changing economic times and to plan for retirement.”

Critics of the woodlot licence amendment say it is a one-sided change of a public-private contract that provides benefits to private land owners. The only difference between the amendment and the 2007 removal of 28,000 hectares of private forest land from tree farm licences on Vancouver Island controlled by Western Forest Products, is the scale, said Ken Wu of the Ancient Forest Alliance. The Victoria-based conservation group mounted public opposition to the 2007 removal of Western’s southern Vancouver Island forestlands adjacent to the Juan De Fuca Marine Trail.

The government’s handling of that removal drew an admonishment from the auditor-general and ignited widespread community protest that has yet to die down.

“This sounds like a mini-version of the tree farm licence removal controversy,” Wu said in an interview. As was the case with the larger tree farm licences, private forest lands cannot be developed as long as they are in a woodlot. There is no development restriction once the lands are taken out.

There are 875 woodlot licences in B.C. operating on 505,000 hectares of forest land but only 91,000 hectares, or 18 per cent of the land, is private. The rest is Crown land, often obtained in return for keeping the private portion of the land within the woodlot licence.

“In many cases people were granted woodlot licences on Crown land by agreeing to include their private forest lands within the woodlot licence,” said Wu. “It’s similar to the situation with many coastal tree farm licences but on a smaller scale. The removal of those private lands from the woodlot licence essentially frees them up for development while allowing them to keep the Crown woodlot licence, and that’s not in the public interest.”

According to the website of the Federation of British Columbia Woodlot Associations, the woodlot licences are “a form of area-based tenure which is unique to British Columbia. In effect, they are partnerships between the licence holder and the Province of British Columbia to manage public and private forest lands.”

Brian McNaughton, executive director of the association, said in an interview that the estate planning is the prime reason woodlot owners want the right to take their private lands out of the woodlot.

“We have an aging demographic,” he said.

He said not all woodlot owners, himself included, will want to take private lands out. Some might want to take a portion out, and others might want to take all out but continue to manage the public portion.

He said the association expects there will be some controversy and wants to be transparent in what it is proposing. Before any land could be taken out of the woodlot licence, it would be advertised locally and the public be invited to comment. An accommodation could then be reached, he said, which might include the woodlot owner taking steps to ensure that public values are maintained. The decision to allow forest companies to withdraw their private lands motivated woodlot owners to seek the same right, but he said there is a difference in scale.

“We are talking about woodlots, which are small parcels, we are not talking about large tracks of timber, like perhaps was done with the corporations,” he said.

Minister of Forests, Lands and Natural Resources Steve Thomson defended the decision at a media scrum at the legislature Wednesday, saying woodlot owners would have to meet certain conditions before they could withdraw private land from their woodlot.

“This will be limited. This is dealing with an aging demographic in the woodlot industry. This means that they can continue woodlot operations without having to surrender the whole woodlot in terms of their planning,” he said.

NDP forestry critic Norm McDonald said he understands that woodlot owners require some flexibility but allowing them to remove their private lands while continuing to harvest timber on the public lands portion of their licence is not the answer.

Woodlot owners, he said, originally received the benefit of tenure on public lands by putting up their private lands to manage as forestlands. As long as their private lands are in woodlots, the owners receive favourable taxation and other benefits, McDonald said.

“We have a high degree of discomfort with this,” he said in an interview

Link to the Vancouver Sun article:  https://www.vancouversun.com/business/Move+Liberals+amend+Forest+draws+criticism/5521376/story.html

 

This label will be coming to a liquor store near you next month

Forest brews, mighty tasty

More good news for our friends at the Ancient Forest Alliance, who just won Phillips Beer’s “Benefit Brew” competition.

The vote — which was decided entirely online by beer fans alike — overwhelmingly declared the AFA winner, with “Ancient Brown Ale” microbrew beer to be released next month into select private liquor stores. Full proceeds (about $10,000) go to the AFA.

“This is huge for us, as we run on a budget of about $40,000 a year,” says AFA’s Ken Wu, who adds he is a beer fan. As for his fav Phillips until now? “I buy the mix-packs, and drink them all,” he says.

Link to the Monday Magazine article: https://www.mondaymag.com/articles/entry/the-week-oct-6

 

Ancient Forest Alliance

CTV News – Ancient Forest Alliance wins Benefit Brew contest

Direct link to video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zlcNBveGt74

CTV News video clip of the Ancient Forest Alliance’s win in the Phillips Beer “Benefit Brew” contest. The AFA will receive the sales proceeds from a custom, microbrewed beer called the “Ancient Brown Ale”. Proceeds could be upwards of $10,000 for our organization which is is huge for us – about 1/4 of our annual budget this year!

This label will be coming to a liquor store near you next month

And the benefit brew winner is: Ancient Forest Alliance

The Ancient Forest Alliance has tapped a keg worth $9,000 after the environmental movement was named the winner of Phillips Brewing Company’s annual benefit brew competition.

The alliance, a two yearold Victoria-based non-profit organization that works to protect old-growth forest in the province, was the clear winner of the competition that over a two-week period had the public vote for their charity of choice online at www.phillipsbeer.com.

“They took an early lead and it was interesting to watch it grow from day to day,” said Phillips owner Matt Phillips. “They were very organized.”

More than 9,100 people voted in the online contest that will see the winner reap all of the proceeds from the sales of a batch of specially brewed beer – in this case Ancient Brown Ale.

Phillips said the contest, now in its third year, has meant a cash boost of anywhere between $7,000 and $9,000 for local charities.

“It all depends on how much beer we can squeeze out of this [batch],” said Phillips. “They are doing great work but I understand they have a really small operating budget so this is very significant help for them which makes it even better for us.”

Last year, the Alliance’s operating budget was $60,000. “We are grateful for the great amount of support we’ve received from the small business community of Victoria and Vancouver Island. Phillips Beer’s Benefit Brew will be a major infusion of support that will help us build a stellar ancient forest campaign this fall,” said Ken Wu, Alliance co-founder.

Phillips started brewing the beer Monday and labels have been sent to the printers. Phillips hopes to see a final product ready by the end of this month and in stores by mid-November.

This label will be coming to a liquor store near you next month

Ancient Forest Alliance wins Benefit Brew competition of Phillips Beer

For Immediate Release
October 1, 2011

Ancient Forest Alliance wins “Benefit Brew” competition of Phillips Beer

The Ancient Forest Alliance is the winner of an online voting competition to become the recipient of a new benefit microbrew beer made by local Victoria company, Phillips Beer. “Ancient Brown Ale” will be the new microbrew beer to be released next month into select private liquor stores, with full sales proceeds going to the Ancient Forest Alliance.

“We’re very pleased to win the Benefit Brew competition. $10,000 is huge for us, equivalent to about 25% of our funding this year. We’re a new organization with very limited funds, but we’ve been working extremely hard to save ancient forests – and we promise proceeds from the Benefit Brew will go far with us,” stated TJ Watt, Ancient Forest Alliance campaigner. “I’m also sure that among the Ancient Forest Alliance’s beer drinking supporters there are a lot of Phillips Beer fans, which is a local company that is renowned for its tastiness and quality.”

The Benefit Brew competition was narrowed down to 10 applicant charities and non-profit organizations on September 9, followed by a two-week online vote on Phillips Beer’s website which ended on September 23. It’s expected the sales proceeds will total up to $10,000 for the Ancient Forest Alliance.

The Ancient Forest Alliance is a Victoria-based, registered charitable environmental organization founded in 2010, working to protect BC’s endangered old-growth forests and forestry jobs. The organization organizes hikes, slideshows, rallies, and public education campaigns, calling on the BC government to protect BC’s endangered old-growth forests and ensure sustainable second-growth forestry. The organization’s campaign to protect the Avatar Grove near the town of Port Renfrew has had a particularly high profile with the public and in the media. See the organization’s spectacular photo and video gallery here.

Phillips Beer was founded by Victoria brewer, Matthew Phillips, over a decade ago. From the company’s humble beginnings, originally financed on Phillip’s multiple credit cards with deliveries made from his 1985 Subaru station wagon, Phillips Beer has become recognized as one of the foremost brewing companies in Canada, winning numerous provincial and national awards for their diverse, quality microbrews.

“The Ancient Forest Alliance is grateful for the great amount of support we’ve received from the small business community of Victoria and Vancouver Island. Phillips Beer’s Benefit Brew will be a major infusion of support that will help us build a stellar ancient forest campaign this fall,” stated Ken Wu, co-founder of the Ancient Forest Alliance. “Not only will the funds be extremely helpful, but the beautiful and informative labels on the bottles themselves will help to raise awareness about the need to protect old-growth forests! We want to thank thousands of our supporters for voting for us and Phillips Beer for supporting the non-profit and charitable community of BC.”

Flores Island sunset in Clayoquot Sound. This photo and many more will be available for purchase at the show!

Ancient Forest Photo Show – Fundraiser! Wed, Sept. 28th

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Time: 5:00pm – 8:30pm (Drop in anytime during those hours!)
Date: Wednesday, Sept. 28th
LocationApt. # P-2, 5th floor, 725 Yates Street,Victoria, BC
This is an event you surely don’t want to miss! Ancient Forest Alliance’s award-winning photographer TJ Watt will have a selection of his finest photographs for sale at a catered showing in downtown Victoria. Join the photographer himself and AFA’s Ken Wu for a lovely evening with live music, hors d’oeuvres, and a cash bar, located in a beautiful top-floor penthouse suite.
Please hit ‘ATTEND’ on the Facebook event page and then ‘SELECT’ friends and family to invite here: https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100000685892458#!/event.php?eid=266394390050470
To view some …of TJ’s stunning photographs, visit his online photo galleries:

AFA photo galleryhttps://16.52.162.165/photos-media/
Personal websitehttps://www.utopiaphoto.ca/
Photo bloghttps://utopiaphoto.ca/blog/

On display will be nearly a dozen 24”x36” prints, a range of smaller prints, and a few select framed works. Featured images will range from Canada’s biggest trees, to coastal landscape views and lush forest scenes, as well as new UNRELEASED images from one of the most stunning and unique forests on Vancouver Island!

Born and raised in Metchosin, TJ has been shooting for nearly a decade and has become best known for his spectacular photos of BC’s endangered old-growth forests. His images of have been published in provincial and national news media articles, books, posters, magazines, and museums. This is your chance to take home signed prints from one of Canada’s top nature photographers!

***This event is a fundraiser for the Ancient Forest Alliance which is in need of funding to continue its vital campaigns to protect BC’s ancient forests and forestry jobs.

Ancient Forest Alliance co-founder Ken Wu beside one of the Avatar Grove's biggest redcedars marked with the original logging survey paint.

Avatar Grove closer to being protected

Like the main character Jake Sully in 2009’s blockbuster movie Avatar, Ken Wu, founder of the Ancient Forest Alliance, feels drawn to protect a primeval wilderness. In Wu’s case, it’s Avatar Grove in Port Renfrew — which is now one step closer to protection.

The Ministry of Forests, Lands and Natural Resource Operations has drafted a proposal for an amendment that would add 49 hectares in the Avatar Grove area as an old growth management area (OGMA), and an additional 10.4 hectares in nearby Axe Creek, making them both off-limits to logging.

“Certainly it’s an excellent step forward,” said Wu. “(But) we would like to see additional legislation for a provincial conservancy or park which would be more permanent protection.”

OGMAs fall under regulatory protection meaning it could potentially be modified or removed by the government without a vote. Parks and conservancies provide more permanent protection because they are created —and can only be eliminated —through a majority MLA vote, said Wu. Most parks also get designations on highway maps.

“It’s sort of like wearing a bear costume while you forage alongside grizzly bears. You’re never sure how long the protection’s going to last.”

The Ancient Forest Alliance has been pushing for government action since the organization formed in January 2010. Their goal is for B.C. to implement an old growth strategy that will inventory and protect all old growth forests and ensure sustainable second growth forestry. Prior to starting the AFA, Wu was the executive director of the Western Canada Wilderness Community in Victoria.

Wu said the town of Port Renfrew has been instrumental in helping turn Avatar Grove — named after the movie that coincidentally came out the same time the grove was discovered — into “an ancient forest campaign on steroids.” Every day now draws people locally and from all over the world to see the gigantic, gnarled trees.

Rosie Betsworth, president of the Port Renfrew Chamber of Commerce, confirmed that there has been a “big increase” in their tourism industry.

“I was up there about a month ago, there were probably 25 people or so (visiting),” said Betsworth. “It’s brought a lot of business to Port Renfrew.”

There is, however, one caveat to the proposal.

With the combined 59.4 hectares that would be added to OGMAs, 57.4 hectares of mixed old growth/second growth is also being taken out from higher-elevation “bits and pieces” within Tree Farm License 46 owned by the Teal-Jones Group, said Wu.

“We’re not in favour of any kind of land swap scenario,” he said.

“We’ve already lost 90 per cent of the ancient forest on the southern Island, none of that should get logged. The other 90 per cent is already second growth now, they can log that sustainably and leave the last of the old growth.”

The amendment is now open to public comment. Comments can be emailed to RenfrewOGMA@gov.bc.ca until Nov. 9.