Chinese-Language Ancient Forest Tours – Training for Educators Begins in Stanley Park

Today the Ancient Forest Alliance (www.AncientForestAlliance.org), the Hua Foundation (www.HuaFoundation.org) and the Stanley Park Ecology Society (www.StanleyParkEcology.ca) launched a new educational program that will eventually target the half a million Chinese-speakers in the Lower Mainland about the ecology and conservation of BC's old-growth forests.

The organizations held their first “training for educational tour guides”, volunteers who are interested in potentially leading old-growth nature walks in Mandarin or Cantonese, in Stanley Park. The Ancient Forest Alliance's Ken Wu and the Hua Foundation's Kevin Huang guided the dozen volunteers along some of the most spectacular old-growth trails in the park, the Tatlow and Lovers Trails where 14 feet wide, 800 year old redcedars still stand, and explained in English about the plants, animals, ecology, and related conservation issues regarding old-growth forests in British Columbia. The specialized terminology will subsequently be translated by skilled volunteers into Chinese for the participants to study.

As there are half a million people in the Lower Mainland who identify their mother tongue as Chinese, this program aims to help raise the awareness and level of engagement of a major segment of BC's population on the ecology and conservation needs of old-growth forests.

At a future date to be announced, once there is a trained core of nature guides, there will be public tours in Mandarin and Cantonese in the old-growth forests of Stanley Park and potentially in the Walbran Valley, Avatar Grove, Eden Grove, and Echo Lake Ancient forests.

If you can speak Mandarin or Cantonese and would like to participate in this program, please contact Ken Wu at info@16.52.162.165

An Old-Growth Battlefield: Can We Save Our Ancient Matriarchs?

Pick up a copy of British Columbia magazine, which features an article by Hans Temmegai about the endangered old-growth forests of Vancouver Island and the Ancient Forest Alliance's campaign to protect them. See spectacular photos by the AFA's TJ Watt!

Thank You to Sitka!

Thank you to Sitka (https://sitka.ca/) for raising $4000 for the AFA to construct our Avatar Grove boardwalk. We are most grateful for their generous help in making this project a reality!

Opinion: Vancouver Island’s rainforest and communities need urgent action

Vancouver Island’s rainforests are among the rarest ecosystems on the planet — temperate rainforests have never occupied more than 0.5 per cent of the earth’s land surface. They are also among its richest — they have been home to First Nations for time immemorial, and they contribute to a diverse economy including forestry, tourism and wild salmon in indigenous and non-indigenous communities.

Unfortunately, today, the vast majority of productive old-growth rainforest on Vancouver Island and B.C.’s south coast has been logged and replaced by young forest. Only about 10 per cent of the biggest trees are still standing, and some types of forest such as old-growth Douglas fir on south-eastern Vancouver Island have less than one per cent of its original range left. At-risk species, like the Marbled Murrelet, that depend on ancient trees are in decline together with the ancient forests. The original record-high amount of carbon stored in ancient trees has been dramatically reduced as a result of logging and has contributed to climate change.

With so little left it is now only a matter of time before the logging industry runs out of old-growth trees to harvest and fully transitions to logging second-growth. But despite shrinking revenue, declining job numbers from logging, and the increasing value of the remaining intact forests for species, clean water and air, carbon, and as a basis for a diverse economy, more than 9,000 hectares of old-growth rainforest are still being cut every year on Vancouver Island.

That’s why more and more voices are speaking up for protection of endangered rainforest. A year ago, the Ahousaht First Nation in Clayoquot Sound declared a moratorium on industrial logging in their territory. This spring, the B.C. Chamber of Commerce voted to protect old-growth trees where they have greater economic value for communities if left standing. In September, the majority of delegates at this year’s Union of B.C. Municipalities convention voted to protect all of Vancouver Island’s remaining old-growth forest on public land.

The finalization of the Great Bear Rainforest and Haida Gwaii Agreements by First Nations governments and the B.C. government, with the support of a number of environmental organizations and forestry companies, shows that solutions are possible. As a result of these agreements the majority of the old-growth rainforests in the Great Bear Rainforest and on Haida Gwaii are now protected. First Nations’ shared decision-making with the province over land use in their traditional territories has been solidified and there is certainty about the limited amount of old-growth available for logging subject to stringent standards.

South of the Great Bear region, a century of logging has produced an ecological emergency in coastal rainforests. Climate impacts like droughts and storms exert additional pressure and result in severe consequences for watersheds and salmon. With a few exceptions, land-use plans are not meaningfully addressing First Nations rights and interests and are not based on modern conservation science. Meanwhile, raw-log exports are at a record high and jobs per cubic metre at a record low compared to other parts of the world, leaving neither healthy forests nor healthy communities behind.

Unless the provincial government changes course to protect and restore what remains of our endangered old-growth, much of Vancouver Island could turn into an ecological wasteland this century. That’s why we are urging the B.C. government to take immediate action for the well-being of indigenous and non-indigenous communities, for biodiversity, clean air and water, long-term forestry jobs and to save one of the world’s most efficient carbon sinks.

We must start with protecting remaining intact rainforest areas imminently threatened by logging — such as the Central Walbran and East Creek — and using a science-based phased approach for protecting and restoring the remaining old-growth forest, starting with the most endangered ecosystems.

A comprehensive conservation and forest management plan for Vancouver Island and B.C.’s south coast must respect First Nations rights and interests, enable a transition to sustainable second-growth forestry, support diverse economic activities such as tourism, and reduce carbon emissions.

Saving our best ally in the fight against global warming means improving forest management to reduce carbon emissions from forests and ending wasteful practices such as slash burning. We are certainly the last generation that will have an opportunity to make a difference for the fate for Vancouver Island’s remaining old-growth forests.

Arnold Bercov is president of the Public and Private Workers of Canada; Maquinna (Lewis George) Tyee Hawiih Ahousaht; Dan Hager is president of the Port Renfrew Chamber of Commerce; Andy MacKinnon is a forest ecologist and councillor in Metchosin, B.C.; Jens Wieting is a forest campaigner with Sierra Club B.C.

Read more: https://vancouversun.com/opinion/opinion-remaining-old-growth-forest-must-be-protected

Thank You to Joshua Wright!

Thank you to 13-year-old Joshua Wright, one of our great young donors, who has raised $350 for the AFA through the sale of his drawings. Joshua came to support our Avatar Boardwalk construction efforts in late September.  We are SO grateful for conscious young people who also take action to make the world a better place. Thank you Joshua!

Avatar Grove Boardwalk Construction – Sept 2016

Here are some photos from the final volunteer boardwalk construction weekend at the Avatar Grove near Port Renfrew! The group of dedicated volunteers got together and worked two 10 hour days to complete most of the final major projects at the grove. These included two new staircases near the entrance of the Upper Grove which connect to a new walkway and vastly improve ease of access; a new set of stairs and walkway up a steep root section in the Upper Grove; railings around the deck a stairs leading down to the creek; adding rock and gravel to some muddy areas; and more! The feedback we’ve been receiving from folks on the trail has been excellent. Thank you so much to the volunteers and donors who've contributed over the past three years – we couldn’t have done it without you!! A big thanks as well goes to MEC and Sitka for contributing funding and to the Pacheedaht First Nation who donated a large portion of the wood. There will still be periodic upgrades to various spots on the trail but the major work is essentially done. Stay tuned for more!

B.C. municipalities support Vancouver Island push to save old-growth forests

Delegates at the annual Union of B.C. Municipalities convention agreed to send a letter to the provincial government asking for a land-use plan to protect old-growth forest on Crown land, by restricting logging to second-growth trees.

The move follows a decision by the B.C. government last year to approve a permit for logging on one of eight planned “cutblock” areas in the central Walbran Valley on Vancouver Island. The area was not protected when more than 160 square kilometres of forests were placed off-limits to logging in the Carmanah Walbran Provincial Park created in 1993 following protests and blockades.

“The current model of liquidating old growth on the Island is not serving anybody well,” said Victoria Coun. Ben Isitt, noting the forests are a vital asset that are just as important as Okanagan Lake or the Fraser River.

Metchosin Coun. Andy MacKinnon, who made the resolution, agreed, saying trees over 250 years old are a finite resource that fuel the tourism economy and recreation and should be retained for future generations. He argued only 13 per cent of old-growth forests are protected, which placed Vancouver Island at “high ecological risk.”

“Our old-growth forests are not a renewable resource,” he said.

However, some Vancouver Islanders such as Cowichan Valley Coun. Al Sebring were against the move, maintaining municipalities should focus on local issues such as roads, water and sewer and not old-growth forests, the Site C dam or anti-poverty legislation.

Charlie Cornfield, a councillor in Campbell River, and Port Hardy Coun. Fred Robertson added the issue should be debated regionally because it only affected the Island communities. “The motion could have a significant impact on the social fabric of small forest-dependent communities like Port Hardy,” Robertson said. “Nobody has talked to us or the First Nations.”

The UBCM committee had recommended the motion be heard locally, but MacKinnon asked that it be raised at the convention. In 1992, delegates also supported a resolution for old-growth forest that asked the province to “take the necessary steps to ensure that the proposed protected areas are not compromised before the Protected Areas Strategy has been completed.”

The province has said there are more than 250,000 square kilometres of old-growth forests in B.C., of which 45,000 sq. km. are fully protected, according to the UBCM. It also stated that of 19,000 sq. km. of Crown forest on Vancouver Island, 8,401.25 sq. km. are considered old growth, but only 3,130 sq. km. are available for timber harvesting.

But MacKinnon, a biologist who previously worked with the Ministry of Forests, claims those numbers are inflated, and if it only included productive land they would be much smaller.

Read more: https://vancouversun.com/news/local-news/b-c-municipalities-support-vancouver-island-push-to-save-old-growth-forests

Hadwin’s Judgement Screening – THANK YOU!

Last night almost 600 people showed up for the benefit screenings in Victoria of Hadwin's Judgement, based on John Vaillant's book The Golden Spruce, for the Ancient Forest Alliance! Thanks to all of you who came out and to producer Elizabeth Yake, author John Vaillant, the Cinecenta theatre, and the volunteers who made such a successful night for our organization and cause!

Thank You to Gavin Wright!

Thank you to 9 year old Gavin Wright, who collected donations at his lemonaide stand for the Ancient Forest Alliance! He showed up to present his batch of donations to us after the film screening of Hadwin's Judgement. We're most grateful to Gavin for his initiative to help our organization and campaigns!

BC municipalities back push to protect Vancouver Island’s old-growth forests

The Union of BC Municipalities is throwing its weight behind a call to do more to protect old-growth forests on Vancouver Island.

UBCM delegates passed a resolution by a wide margin at their annual general meeting in Victoria today.

The resolution agreed upon by representatives of BC cities, towns and regional district councils calls on the province to amend the 1994 Vancouver Island Land Use Plan to protect remaining old-growth forests.

Conservationists celebrated the move.

“This is a huge leap forward in the campaign to protect the remaining old–growth forests on Vancouver Island, ” said Ken Wu, executive director of the Ancient Forest Alliance.

“Their preferred policy of logging until the end of our unprotected ancient forests is not sustainable – not only for endangered species and tourism, but ultimately for BC’s forestry workers.”

Wu adds that on BC’s southern coast, satellite photos show that at least 75% of the original, productive old–growth forests have been logged, including well over 90% of the valley bottoms where the largest trees grow.

Read more: https://www.cheknews.ca/bc-municipalities-back-224275/