San Juan Spruce tree and the Red Creek Fir - some of the Canada's largest trees found right nearby!

Sooke fundraiser aims to raise awareness of Island’s ancient trees

Port Renfrew Chamber of Commerce and the Ancient Forest Alliance are jointly organizing a fundraiser Thursday evening to help raise awareness of the need to protect ancient trees.

The aim of the free-drink-and-free-appetizer event at Sooke Harbour House is to increase tourism to monumental trees around Port Renfrew.

The community is Canada’s big trees capital with Avatar Grove, the Red Creek fir — the largest Douglas fir in the world — and the San Juan spruce — the largest spruce tree in Canada — all in close proximity to town, said Ken Wu of the Ancient Forest Alliance.

This summer the Chamber of Commerce wants to hire someone to run its new information centre, Wu said.

“Thousands of visitors will be directed to visit Avatar Grove and ancient forests nearby,” he said.

“This will greatly help to raise the needed awareness about our endangered old-growth forests and will generate greater tourism to the region as friends tell friends to come and see the area’s incredible ancient trees.”

 

UVic Law students gather around one of the giant

Avatar Grove profile on the rise

 

The attraction hasn’t been promoted for long but the area near Port Renfrew dubbed “Avatar Grove” by the Ancient Forest Alliance (AFA) is being seen by growing numbers of visitors, many being guided there by Alliance members.

The environmental advocates with the AFA have worked steadily at publicizing the site of old growth trees they became aware of in late 2009. Some of the cedar and spruce trees located there are reportedly among the oldest and largest on the continent.

The alliance has gained support for its efforts to preserve the grove – first with a sympathetic report from the Forest Practices Board then comments from Forests, Lands and Mines Minister Pat Bell that measures to protect the grove are being considered.

“I’ve had the chief forester working with the Ancient Forest Alliance along with some other prominent NGOs (non-governmental organizations),” the Minister told the Sooke News Mirror on February 18.

“We’re considering what we might be able to do and also mapping out what’s been done already. A significant portion of Avatar Grove is already protected.”

Minister Bell said the nearby logging licensee, Teal-Jones “haven’t indicated any interest in harvesting in there anyway. But if people feel more comfortable having a higher level of protection it’s something I’m prepared to consider.”

The Minister stressed the importance of the area being “safe and secure” if growing numbers of visitors are to show up at the grove which is about a 10-minute drive from Port Renfrew on the way to Lake Cowichan. He concluded by saying he expects to hear back from the chief forester within “the next few weeks.”

A February 10 report from the BC Forest Practices Board had apparently been inspired by a complaint from a private citizen focusing on old growth harvesting.

T.J.Watt, an AFA photograher/campaigner expressed gratification with the report that adds to support for grove preservation so far expressed by MP Dr. Keith Martin, MLA John Horgan and CRD Juan de Fuca regional director Mike Hicks, the Sooke Region Tourism Association and the Port Renfrew Chamber of Commerce.

“Wonderful,” is how Hicks described the news of possible government protection of the grove. On Feb. 17 Hicks said the grove is more valuable to local residents standing than cut.

“The loggers can survive on the second growth in the area,” added Hicks.

“It’s a positive step,” said Rose Betsworth of the Port Renfrew Chamber of Commerce. “Avatar Grove has certainly put Port Renfrew on the map of late. Logging the grove would take away the good exposure we’re getting.”

Watt – the Alliance member credited with taking the hike that led to recent awareness of the grove said a preserved grove, over and above its value as a draw for nature lovers, would present other benefits as well.

“A key point is that old growth forests store two to three times more carbon per hectare than ensuing second-growth tree plantations,” Watt explained. “So keeping old growth forest around actually helps in the fight to stop climate change.”

Ken Wu, Ancient Forest Alliance executive director weighed in,

“How many jurisdictions on Earth still have trees that grow as wide as living rooms and as tall as downtown skyscrapers? And how many still say it’s good to cut down them down? We now have a major second-growth alternative, so it’s nuts to keep logging towards the end of the old-growth resource at this stage in our history.”

 

 

Ancient Forest Alliance

Al Jazeera Reports on Ancient Forest Alliance’s Campaign to Save Old-Growth Forests and the Avatar Grove

 

Here is the news clip from Al Jazeera, one of the largest TV news networks on Earth that reaches 220 million homes in over 100 countries, who have just featured the Ancient Forest Alliance’s campaign to protect British Columbia’s endangered old-growth forests and the Avatar Grove on Vancouver Island.

Direct link to news clip on Al Jazeera website (and FORWARD to friends and SHARE on Facebook) at:

https://english.aljazeera.net/video/americas/2011/03/201136225519703638.html

 

Or on Youtube at:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=azIKMhsDMoo

 

See the long version on Youtube  at:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v1ZNSo0-prI

 

Please Help Us!

 

SIGN and CIRCULATE our PETITION (ie. FORWARD to email contacts and SHARE on FACEBOOK, and POST on blogs…).

https://16.52.162.165/ways-to-take-action-for-forests/petition/ 

 

WRITE a LETTER –  Do letters help? YES!!!!!

 

Letters are ways for politicians – who are elected or tossed out by voters, and who are also concerned about the province’s international reputation – to track how popular or unpopular their policies are. Each letter you write represents HUNDREDS of people who feel a similar way but didn’t take time to write! College Grants For Graduate Students [Original article no longer available]

 

Please WRITE to BC’s politicians to let them know that you want them to:

 

          Protect the Avatar Grove near Port Renfrew.

          Commit to a Provincial Old-Growth Strategy to ban and quickly phase-out old-growth logging in regions where they are now scarce (Vancouver Island, Lower Mainland, southern Interior, etc.)

          Ensure a transition to sustainable logging of second-growth forests, which now constitute the vast majority of the forested lands in southern BC.

          Ban raw log exports to foreign mills and provide incentives for a value-added, second-growth wood manufacturing industry.

 

Write to:

 

BC’s new Premier Christy Clark at premier@gov.bc.ca

 

Forests Minister Pat Bell at pat.bell.mla@leg.bc.ca

 

NDP leadership candidates:

John Horgan: info@horganforbc.caMike Farnworth: info@mikefarnworth.ca

Adrian Dix: info@adriandixforbc.ca

Nicholas Simons: nicholas@nicholassimons2011.ca

Dana Larsen: info@votedana.ca

 

ALSO if you live in BC, look up and write your own BC MLA, who you can find by entering your postal code in the “MLA look-up tool” here:

 

*** BE SURE to include your HOME MAILING ADDRESS so they know you are a real person!!

And stay tuned for more calls to action – rallies, slideshows, hikes, and various events…

 

Some more info:

See a spectacular video clip (and please forward and share) about the Avatar Grove at:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l_uPkAWsvVw

 

75% of Vancouver Island’s ancient forests have already been logged, including 90% of the largest trees that grow in the valley bottoms, according to satellite photos. See “before” and “after” maps at: https://16.52.162.165/ancient-forests/before-after-old-growth-maps/

 

Old-growth forests are important for sustaining endangered species, tourism, the climate, clean water, and many First Nations cultures.  See SPECTACULAR photos of Canada’s largest trees and stumps at:

https://16.52.162.165/photos-media/

 

************************

 Support the Ancient Forest Alliance!

 

We are a new organization and GREATLY need YOUR support.  

DONATE at:  https://16.52.162.165/donations.php

 

Visit the Ancient Forest Alliance at:

https://16.52.162.165/

Email: info@16.52.162.165

Petition: https://16.52.162.165/ways-to-take-action-for-forests/petition/

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ancientforestalliance/

 

Al Jazeera's Imtiaz Tyab stands reports on BC's endangered old-growth forests while standing on a giant Sitka spruce stump in the Gordon River Valley near Port Renfrew.

In B.C., Al Jazeera finds a new war to cover

With Gadhafi teetering, Mubarak toppled and pretty much every Arab state having come down with a severe case of the wobbles, al Jazeera naturally turns its attention to Avatar Grove – a so-called clearcut and stand of massive trees on Vancouver Island.

It’s true. A crew from the Englishlanguage version of the Mideastbased news network has waded into the woods for a story on B.C. logging practices.

Which evokes a picture of Moammar, the man who put the Daffy in Gadhafi, glued to the big-screen TV and saying: “That’s the gnarliest Sitka spruce I’ve ever seen.”

Well, no, al Jazeera English is actually available to 220 million homes in more than 100 countries around the world, which is what has environmentalists excited.

“International audiences will be astounded to see that British Columbia still has 1,000-year-old trees with tree trunks as wide as living rooms and that tower as tall as downtown skyscrapers -and horrified to know that our government still sanctions cutting them down on a large scale,” said Ken Wu, executive director of the Victoria-based Ancient Forest Alliance, which is campaigning to end old-growth logging in areas where such trees are scarce.

Wu and Metchosin’s T.J. Watt guided the Toronto-based al Jazeera crew around the Port Renfrew area, taking in the area dubbed Avatar Grove.

The name might be so shamelessly contrived that it makes some want to club a whooping crane to death out of spite, but it seems to have done the trick in attracting attention to the cause.

“We’re always interested in environmental stories,” said al Jazeera producer Jet Belgraver, on the phone from Toronto. The story, which will air Saturday, aims to give global viewers “a bit of a reality check” about B.C. logging practices.

“When they think of Canada, they think of pristine forests.”

This sort of thing makes Canadians squirm. We get our noses out of joint when international media ignore us, then do a 180 and get all shirty when they report on our dirty laundry, as was the case when the world showed up for the Olympics and discovered that Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside looked like the cast party for Shaun of the Dead.

As for the struggle for Vancouver Island’s forests, it hasn’t really garnered international attention since 1993’s War in the Woods, the massive protest against Clayoquot Sound logging. The cameras rolled when activist rockers Midnight Oil -whose big, bald lead singer, Peter Garrett, went on to become Australia’s environment minister -played a concert at the protesters’ camp that July. Environmental lawyer Robert Kennedy, Jr. (another kind of rock star) waded in two weeks later. International pressure, the threat of boycott, eventually spurred B.C. forestry reform, such as it was.

Americans tend not to pay much attention to us anymore, though. The Washington Post shut its Canadian bureau in 2007, following the lead of the New York Times, Wall Street Journal and Los Angeles Times. Two years ago, CNN was so ignorant that when Barack Obama paid his first presidential trip to Canada, it identified the red-serge Mounties as soldiers.

Al Jazeera English bills itself as the only international network with a permanent bureau in Canada. The four-year-old, 24-hour news service, based in Qatar, began broadcasting as a digital channel in Canada last May.

The Toronto bureau’s staff are all Canadian, with Imtiaz Tyab, who had worked for the CBC in Vancouver, its on-camera face.

In fact, the entire network has a strong Canadian flavour, including Tony Burman, former editor-inchief of CBC News.

Although influential abroad, the network is having a hard time getting a toehold in the U.S., where the al Jazeera name conjures up images of bomb-happy radical Muslim clerics, and where there appears to be widespread support for exposing the public to a diversity of perspectives, as long as they’re American.

Al Jazeera isn’t that readily accessible in Canada, either.

Shaw carries it as a specialty channel in Victoria, up in the nosebleed section with the Knitting Knetwork and Lithuanian pay-per-view porn, or something like that. It’s easiest to stream it live over the Internet.

As for the old-growth logging practices at the heart of the story, Wu and Watt are encouraged that Forests Minister Pat Bell recently asked B.C.’s chief forester to investigate a Forest Practices Board recommendation that the province find a new way to protect ancient, giant trees.

It wouldn’t be a stretch to imagine the government declaring Avatar Grove (even politicians have begun using the name) off limits to logging.

But Wu says that would just be a start. “It’s not just about saving the cherry on top of the cake.”

If the government doesn’t come up with an old-growth strategy acceptable to the Ancient Forest Alliance, the group plans to target vulnerable Liberal MLAs -not a war in the woods, but a war in the swing ridings.

Maybe that would bring back the cameras, the media always being drawn by war.

Click here to view original article

The international news group Al Jazeera filming near Canada's Gnarliest Tree in the Avatar Grove

BC’s ancient forests draw Al Jazeera’s gaze

With Gadhafi teetering, Mubarak toppled and pretty much every Arab state having come down with a severe case of the wobbles, Al Jazeera naturally turns its attention to … Avatar Grove.

It’s true. A crew from the English-language version of the Mideast-based news network has waded into the Vancouver Island woods for a story on BC logging practices.

Which evokes a picture of Moammar, the man who put the Daffy in Gadhafi, glued to the big-screen TV and saying: “That’s the gnarliest Sitka spruce I’ve ever seen.”

Well, no, Al Jazeera English is actually available to 220 million homes in more than 100 countries around the world, which is what has local environmentalists excited.

“International audiences will be astounded to see that British Columbia still has 1,000-year-old trees with tree trunks as wide as living rooms and that tower as tall as downtown skyscrapers -and horrified to know that our government still sanctions cutting them down on a large scale,” said Ken Wu, executive director of the Victoria-based Ancient Forest Alliance, which is campaigning to end old-growth logging in areas where such trees are scarce.

Wu and Metchosin’s T.J. Watt guided the Torontobased Al Jazeera crew around the Port Renfrew area, taking in clearcuts and the stand of massive trees they have dubbed Avatar Grove. The name might be so shamelessly contrived that it makes some want to club a whooping crane to death out of spite, but it seems to have done the trick in attracting attention to the cause.

“We’re always interested in environmental stories,” said Al Jazeera producer Jet Belgraver, on the phone from Toronto. The story, which will air Saturday, aims to give global viewers “a bit of a reality check” about BC logging practices. “When they think of Canada, they think of pristine forests.”

This sort of thing makes Canadians squirm. We get our noses out of joint when international media ignore us, then do a 180 and get all shirty when they report on our dirty laundry, as was the case when the world showed up for the Olympics and discovered that Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside looked like the cast party for Shaun of the Dead.

As for the struggle for Vancouver Island’s forests, it hasn’t really garnered international attention since 1993’s War in the Woods, the massive protest against Clayoquot Sound logging. The cameras rolled when activist rockers Midnight Oil -whose big, bald lead singer, Peter Garrett, went on to become Australia’s environment minister -played a concert at the protesters’ camp that July. Environmental lawyer Robert Kennedy, Jr. (another kind of rock star) waded in two weeks later. International pressure, the threat of boycott, eventually spurred BC forestry reform, such as it was.

Americans tend not to pay much attention to us anymore, though. The Washington Post shut its Canadian bureau in 2007, following the lead of the New York Times, Wall Street Journal and Los Angeles Times. Two years ago, CNN was so ignorant that when Barack Obama paid his first presidential trip to Canada, it identified the red-serge Mounties as soldiers.

Al Jazeera English bills itself as the only international network with a permanent bureau in Canada. The four-year-old 24-hour news service, based in Qatar, began broadcasting as a digital channel in Canada last May. The Toronto bureau’s staff are all Canadian, with Imtiaz Tyab, who had worked for the CBC in Vancouver, its on-camera face.

In fact, the entire network has a strong Canadian flavour, including Tony Burman, former editor in chief of CBC News.

Although influential abroad, the network is having a hard time getting a toehold in the U.S., where the Al Jazeera name conjures up images of bombhappy radical Muslim clerics, and where there appears to be widespread support for exposing the public to a diversity of perspectives, as long as they’re American.

Al Jazeera isn’t that readily accessible in Canada, either. Shaw carries it as a specialty channel in Victoria, up in the nosebleed section with the Knitting Knetwork and Lithuanian pay-per-view porn, or something like that. It’s easiest to stream it live over the Internet.

As for the old-growth logging practices at the heart of the story, Wu and Watt are encouraged that Forests Minister Pat Bell recently asked BC’s chief forester to investigate a Forest Practices Board recommendation that the province find a new way to protect ancient, giant trees.

It wouldn’t be a stretch to imagine the government declaring Avatar Grove (even politicians have begun using the name) off-limits to logging; the Liberals need to do something to recover from the Juan de Fuca lands debacle.

But Wu says that would just be a start. “It’s not just about saving the cherry on top of the cake.”

If the government doesn’t come up with an old-growth strategy acceptable to the Ancient Forest Alliance, the group plans to target vulnerable Liberal MLAs -not a war in the woods, but a war in the swing ridings.

Maybe that would bring back the cameras, the media always being drawn by war.

A waterfall cascades through the old-growth redcedars in the endagered Avatar Grove.

Avatar Grove to be featured on Al Jazeera News Network

A Vancouver Island ecological landmark will be featured on Al Jazeera, a major Arabic and English language news network

 The Ancient Forest Alliance says Al Jazeera film crews came to the island last week, to get shots of the Avatar Grove, an area of old growth forest near Port Renfrew which has been flagged for logging

Speaking on CFAX 1070 with Dave Dickson Thursday, the Alliance’s spokesperson Ken Wu explains how the network found out about Avatar Grove

“it was their Qatar-based headquarters that noticed there was a torrent of articles coming out in Canada about the Avatar Grove. That was about 2 weeks ago, you might remember there was a flurry of articles when the minister of forests Pat Bell said ‘ok we are going to look into saving this Avatar Grove place possibly, and protecting our biggest trees’ and that, you know triggered a whole series of articles in Canada and they noticed it, so they told their crew to come and check it out and do a story as part of the international news pieces”

Wu says the piece will be aired on the network this weekend.

The Alliance is hoping to save Avatar Grove from logging. They say while some of the trees in the grove have been flagged for logging, no cutting permits have been issued yet by the Ministry of Forests

original article

Avatar Grove

Al Jazeera to report from front lines of B.C.’s old-growth logging issue

B.C.’s old-growth logging issues, which have long been the focus of North American and European media, are about to reach a far broader audience.

A film crew from the Toronto office of Al Jazeera visited southwestern Vancouver Island recently to report on old-growth logging issues for the English version of the Arabic news network.

 “This will be the biggest international news hit for the old-growth campaign in a long time,” Ken Wu of the Ancient Forest Alliance said Thursday. “There is a strong international market for environmental issues, particularly one that is very charismatic.”

The Al Jazeera crew recently visited the so-called Avatar Grove, a stand of about 100 old-growth cedars and Douglas firs near Port Renfrew named after Canadian James Cameron’s blockbuster movie. They also visited nearby the San Juan Spruce — largest of its species in Canada — and clearcut stumps.

“They were blown away,” Wu said. “International audiences will be stunned to see not just trees with trunks as wide as living rooms … but that the government endorses logging of these endangered stands.”

One particularly gnarly cedar at Avatar Grove measures 11 metres in circumference near the base of its trunk, its distorted look attributed to a non-lethal fungal infection.

Forests minister Pat Bell has asked the province’s chief forester to review existing regulations for protecting trees that, because of their age, have values that make them worth preserving.

The alliance is fighting to save not just the grove, but remaining old-growth stands on Vancouver Island and the Lower Mainland region. “This is one of the few jurisdictions where it’s still the norm to cut down centuries-old trees.” said Wu, noting the Al Jazeera report will broadcast on Saturday.

Click here to view the original article

AFA Photographer TJ Watt relaxes in a giant redcedar the day he and a friend discovered the now endangered Avatar Grove.

Old-growth group helping push forest policy changes

The increasingly famous Avatar Grove old-growth forest has gained some political backing.

Pat Bell, minister of forests, mines and lands, announced in early February that pockets of ancient B.C. forests need more protection.

Bell’s announcement came on the heels of a similar recommendation released by the Forest Practices Board, an independent advisory group for the B.C. government.

FPB recommended the government protect a section of trees in the Gordon River drainage area north of Port Renfrew. Environmental activists from Ancient Forests Alliance named the area Avatar Grove, after the popular 2009 sci-fi movie. The report issued by the FPB also references Avatar Grove in its document.

“This is just a recommendation,” said TJ Watt, AFA cofounder and Metchosin-based photographer. “Until concrete actions are taken there is still more work to be done.”

The recommendation is based upon the 60-hectare area the AFA has been heavily promoting for more than a year. Ken Wu, AFA cofounder, said his group’s work has certainly played a part in this.

“We’ve popularized it,” Wu said. The areas discussed in the report, Avatar Grove and a nearby cut block, have been main focus of the AFA.

After receiving a complaint from an individual, the FPB recommended “certain individual, or small groups, of exceptional trees” at Avatar Grove could be more valuable if they are spared from logging. Watt introduced the complainant to the area.

In the recommendation, the FPB wants government, forest professionals and licensees to find creative ways to save these trees.

“We want supporters to flood the government (offices with letters),” Wu said. “I am encouraged by Minister Pat Bell’s statements, let’s see if he does good on them.”

While the AFA approves of the recommendation its members think it still isn’t enough. “They need to go further, we have so little of the productive old growth forest on Vancouver Island left,” Watt said.

The report stated about 25 per cent of the area is already protected and the remaining land is available for logging.

“The overall feeling I’ve got is most everyone gets it,” Watt said. “Local businesses get it, tourist associations get it, various politicians are taking stances on it.

“On Vancouver Island 75 per cent of the productive old growth forest has been logged. When so little remains you need to protect that.”

Watt was exploring the Gordon River valley about a year ago to see what old growth remained, when he found what had been dubbed Avatar Grove.

“Unfortunately we found giant tree stumps instead of giant trees,” he said.

“We just started finding big tree after big tree. It boggled my mind that it was still there. Everything had been logged behind it, beside it and on all sides. I knew it had the potential to be the Cathedral Grove of Port Renfrew.”

On a return trip Watt and Wu noticed the area had been surveyed with flagging tape and spray paint markings on the trees.

Watt speculated trees at Avatar Grove are still standing due to the attention the forest has received.

“There is a high chance that if no one had discovered it, it wouldn’t be standing right now.”

Loggers painted a sad face with its tongue sticking out making a mockery of the old-growth devastation in the background. Upper Walbran Valley

No Paradigm Shift in BC Government, But New Recognition of Public Mood for Protecting Avatar Grove and Expanding Old-Growth Protection

Ancient Forest Alliance plans public hike to Avatar Grove on Sunday, February 27

Forest activists reacted with amusement at comments made by the BC government and a logging industry representative in a Times Colonist article “BC looking for new ways to protect ancient trees” on Tuesday.

In the article the Forests Minister Pat Bell states, “BC has more old-growth today than we’ve ever had,” and that “we are not running out of old-growth on Vancouver Island…”

 

“Somehow a century of industrial logging has actually increased the amount of old-growth forests on Vancouver Island, according to the BC government. Maybe the Ancient Forest Alliance should take up logging to increase the amount of old-growth forests in BC!” joked Ken Wu, Ancient Forest Alliance (AFA) executive director. “The BC government still retains its old mindset about old forests, as they’re still into their silly spin-doctoring – clearly they haven’t experienced a paradigm shift about our old-growth forests. However, the fact is this government has always maintained such nonsense – the main difference now, the new thing here, is their acknowledgement that there is a real public mood in seeing greater protection levels for our old-growth forests, including the Avatar Grove and BC’s largest trees. Of course we welcome this acknowledgement on the need to expand old-growth forest protections.”

 

The Ancient Forest Alliance is planning another public hike to the Avatar Grove on Sunday, February 27. More details will be posted on its website www.ancientforestalliance.org next week.

 

Since the Avatar Grove was located in December of 2009 by Ancient Forest Alliance campaigner TJ Watt, the AFA has organized countless public hikes, slideshows, rallies, photography expeditions, letter-writing drives, and petition drives to get the area protected. There has been a torrent of local, provincial, and national media stories about the Avatar Grove, and support has snowballed to include the Port Renfrew Chamber of Commerce, Sooke Region Tourism Association, and local elected representatives at the federal, provincial, and regional levels including Liberal MP Keith Martin, NDP MLA John Horgan, and Regional Director Mike Hicks, respectively. The Avatar Grove consists of numerous monumental ancient redcedars, some 14 feet (over 4 meters) in trunk diameter, giant Douglas firs, and a few large Sitka spruce, all of which are heavily targeted by the old-growth logging industry. “Canada’s Gnarliest Tree”, a huge redcedar with a 10 foot (3 meter) wide burl, is also found in the Avatar Grove. The area was surveyed and flagged with falling boundary and road location tape by Teal-Jones by February of 2010.  See Avatar Grove photos at: https://16.52.162.165/photos-media/

 

Almost 6000 people have now viewed the Ancient Forest Alliance’s new video clip (1 minute), “Canada’s Gnarliest Tree – Save the Avatar Grove” at:  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l_uPkAWsvVw

 

“We’ll give thanks if Bell makes good to protect the Avatar Grove. Protecting our most impressive monumental trees and ancient groves is much needed, although most importantly we need to protect old-growth ecosystems on a larger scale. Saving the cherry on top while the voracious neighbour devours the rest of the cake will still deprive our children,” states Ken Wu, Ancient Forest Alliance executive director. “The logging industry’s appetite has devoured 90% of our valley bottom ancient forests on Vancouver Island where the largest trees grow – they’ve had far more than their share. “

 

“There is an inevitable transition to logging only second-growth forests in southern BC as the old-growth stands run out – what we’re saying is let’s make the transition now while we still have some significant old-growth stands left,  for wildlife, tourism, the climate, and future generations. I think the majority of British Columbians would agree with that,” stated TJ Watt, Ancient Forest Alliance campaigner and photographer.

 

In Tuesday’s Times Colonist article, Rick Jeffery, president of the Coast Forest Products Association, also spin-doctored various statistics, claiming that there are more protected areas than lands available for logging (reality check:  most park lands consist of alpine rock and ice, marginal subalpine forests, and coastal bog forests, and contain a minority fraction of productive forest lands of value for logging), that most monumental stands of ancient trees are already protected (reality check: 90% of Vancouver Island’s productive old-growth forests in the valley bottoms, where the monumental stands grow, have already been logged, and a significant amount of the remainder is unprotected), and that the threat against a stand like the Avatar Grove is an exception.

 

“The Avatar Grove is just one example of the thousands of ancient forest stands currently under threat in BC, literally hundreds of which get clearcut each year – that’s a simple, sad fact. The difference with the Avatar Grove is that it is easy to get to and grows on gentle terrain so that large numbers of people have now seen this place. Most other endangered ancient forests are remote and difficult for the average person to get to, and thus their destruction goes unseen,” states TJ Watt, AFA explorer and photographer.

 

On Vancouver Island, according to satellite photos, about 75% of the original, productive old-growth forests have been logged, including 90% of the valley bottoms where the largest trees grow. See “before” and “after” maps at:

https://16.52.162.165/ancient-forests/before-after-old-growth-maps/

 

AFA photographer TJ Watt shows a print of his photo of a man on a stump in the Gordon River valley that won first place in a Outdoor Photography Canada magazine photo contest.

Metchosin photographer earns national recognition

A stunning photograph by Metchosin photographer TJ Watt has gained national recognition.

Watt earned first place in Outdoor Photography Canada magazine’s “human impact on the environment” photo contest.

The image is of a lone man standing on the stump of an ancient tree in the middle of a clear cut in Gordon River valley, near Port Renfrew.

“This shot I feel summed up the factual aspects of what’s happening and the emotional aspects,” Watt said. “It summarizes the whole impact in the photo.”

While shooting in the Gordon River valley, Watt said he’d come across stumps with circumferences of nearly 50 feet.

The photo was taken about a year ago after Watt discovered this area.

He uses his photography to spread word on environmental activism. Watt is a founding member of the Ancient Forest Alliance, a group that has highlighted the so-called Avatar Grove trees near Port Renfew.

“I think the main thing is these places are actually so close to us, but seem so remote. They are finally getting out to the world through photos,” Watt said.

Watt’s photo may be on the cover of an upcoming environmental documentary and possibly even in a museum exhibit. Both projects are still in the works, Watt said.

The same photo also earned Watt first place in the Metchosin Day photography contest.

“It’s also been in many different newspapers,” Watt said. “It’s been travelling around and I get many requests by e-mail for it. It’s not just about pretty pictures now. There is a higher cause to my photos.”

[Original article no longer available]