
Help AFA raise $250,000 by December 31st – we’re over halfway there!
Support the protection of old-growth forests in BC through Indigenous-led conservation, science, and public action. Donate to help safeguard ancient forests.
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TJ Watt2025-12-15 15:20:282025-12-15 17:55:17Help AFA raise $250,000 by December 31st – we’re over halfway there!
Chek News: Document reveals approval to harvest remnant old-growth in B.C.’s northwest
BC Timber Sales has ended a policy protecting remnant old-growth in northwest B.C., citing First Nations’ positions, sparking concerns from ecologists and residents.
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TJ Watt2025-12-08 13:49:362025-12-08 13:49:36Chek News: Document reveals approval to harvest remnant old-growth in B.C.’s northwest
Thank You to Our Silent Auction business Donors!
Thank you to these local businesses for generously donating items and experiences to our first-ever online Silent Auction!
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TJ Watt2025-12-08 13:17:322025-12-08 13:50:51Thank You to Our Silent Auction business Donors!
Statement on the Provincial Forest Advisory Council’s Interim Report – AFA & EEA
The Provincial Forest Advisory Council’s (PFAC) interim report falls short of addressing the root causes of BC’s forestry crisis or outlining the bold, decisive actions needed to reverse it, warn the Ancient Forest Alliance (AFA) and Endangered Ecosystem Alliance (EEA).
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TJ Watt2025-11-21 10:13:452025-11-21 10:15:43Statement on the Provincial Forest Advisory Council’s Interim Report – AFA & EEA
Big trees boost tourism in West Coast town
/in News CoveragePORT RENFREW, B.C. – Pink ribbons knotted to tree branches at the side of a gravel logging road mark the entry to an amazing earthly experience, something so different from anything most people have experienced it might be on another world.
The air is cool, damp and even smells green. Look up and there is no blue sky, just scraggy branches and the tops of 60-metre-high trees, that allow sunlight to hit the mossy ground only in broken beams of light.
This is Avatar Grove, a 50-hectare piece of untouched old-growth forest, about 110 kilometres northwest of Victoria.
Through a karma-like convergence, natural-born enemies, environmentalists, business leaders and politicians are joining hands to protect it from logging and create a nature-lover’s paradise.
It’s as if the happy-ending script is writing itself at Avatar Grove — a sequel of sorts to the Hollywood blockbuster, unfolding in the few remaining dark, moody and ancient big-tree forests on southern Vancouver Island.
“When we came across the area, it was at the same time the movie `Avatar’ was released,” said Ken Wu, co-founder of the Victoria-based Ancient Forest Alliance. “`Avatar’ was about saving old-growth forests, albeit on an alien moon.
“We wanted people to make the connection that here on earth we have real spectacular old growth (forests) that are endangered and that need protecting,” he said, standing near a huge cedar marked in spray paint with the number five, signifying that it once faced a chainsaw death.
Wu said choosing the name Avatar Grove, courting the business community in nearby struggling Port Renfrew and getting the ear of the B.C. government has sparked a groundswell to declare the rugged coastal area the Big Trees Capital of Canada.
The Ancient Forest Alliance spent the summer taking busloads of tourists into Avatar Grove to see the mysterious forest, especially the alien-shaped western red cedar, nicknamed Canada’s gnarliest tree for is Volkswagen-sized burl that makes it look like something out of one of J.R.R. Tolkien’s fantasy novels.
“Port Renfrew really is the biggest trees capital of Canada,” said Wu. “The fact is the largest Douglas fir tree on earth is near town. The biggest spruce tree in Canada is also near town. The biggest tree in Canada, the Cheewaht cedar, is also north of town.
“And we’ve got the gnarliest tree at the Avatar Grove,” he said. “It’s an exceptional place for big-tree tourism and I think this is the year people are starting to recognize that and are coming to see them.”
Rosie Betsworth, Port Renfrew’s Chamber of Commerce president, agrees with Wu and the Ancient Forest Alliance that the big trees are something to see. It’s also offering a tourism boost to the community that, until recently, considered logging and fishing its lifeblood.
“The majority (here) can see the value of tourism dollars,” she said. “And now that there’s probably a handful of loggers left in this community, it is no longer a logging town.
Betsworth said environmentalists like Wu and photographer T.J. Watt, who discovered Avatar Grove in 2009 while scouting the area’s few remaining old-growth stands, convinced locals that there is money in saving trees as opposed to cutting them down. Grants for college students
“For a small group of very broke guys, my God, they’ve made so much movement,” she said.
Steve Thomson, B.C.’s minister of Forests, Lands and Natural Resources, said the government halted planned logging of Avatar Grove and is awaiting the results of a public consultation process on the area’s future.
But he suggested it already appears logging is no longer a viable option.
“The province has published its intent to adjust the old-growth management area to protect that grove,” he said.
Watt said Avatar Grove and the other huge trees in the Port Renfrew area, where many hillsides are scarred from clear-cut logging, are living examples of Mother Nature’s majesty that are located steps from easily accessible roads.
“Right away we knew we had something special because I couldn’t think of anywhere else where you could see trees of this size and get there in something like a Honda Civic.”
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If you go . . .
Currently, there are no official scheduled tours into Avatar Grove, but visit the Ancient Forest Alliance website: www.ancientforestalliance.org for a map of the area’s big tree sites. The alliance also will take visitors into Avatar Grove or can provide travellers with a detailed and easy to follow map that they can use to guide themselves.
MSN Travel article: https://travel.ca.msn.com/big-trees-boost-tourism-in-west-coast-town
THANK YOU to all those involved with the ancient forest rally!
/in Thank You– Local musician Vince Vaccaro
– 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
/in Take ActionYOUR 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 Watt– Ancient 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://staging.ancientforestalliance.org/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@ancientforestalliance.org
Or visit our Facebook Event page and click attend:
https://www.facebook.com/#!/event.php?eid=288068437869909
For more info contact: info@ancientforestalliance.org
*** 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://staging.ancientforestalliance.org/write-letter.php
And please sign and forward our online petition at: ancientforestalliance.org/ways-to-take-action-for-forests/petition/