This past summer, AFA had the privilege of exploring stunning ancient forests along the shores of Vernon Bay in Barkley Sound. Home to the Uchucklesaht and Tseshaht First Nations, TJ Watt and Ian Illuminato measured monumental redcedar trees up to 12 feet in diameter.
Despite the area’s significance, the BC government has granted approval for the logging company, Interfor, to cut a total of 55 hectares of rare, intact ancient forests. However, due to the recent 2.6 million hectares of potential old-growth deferrals announced by the province, some stands have been identified for immediate deferrals.
These forests are now at imminent risk of being logged unless the local First Nations and the province immediately enact these deferrals. Speak up now! Demand the BC government commit conservation funding to support Indigenous-led protection of at-risk old-growth by sending a message.
Overlooking the unprotected ancient forests of Vernon Bay in Barkley Sound in Uchucklesaht and Tseshaht nation territories. 33 logging cutblocks have been approved in this region, some overlapping with the newly recommended deferral areas.
http://15.223.158.206/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/Vernon-Bay-July-2021-14-2.jpg9991500TJ Watthttps://staging.ancientforestalliance.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/10/cropped-AFA-Logo-1000px.pngTJ Watt2021-12-06 14:29:202024-10-05 11:27:10Photos: Vernon Bay
Friendly reminder, if you’re planning on ordering AFA gifts this holiday season, please place your order by the following deadlines to increase your likelihood of receiving your gifts before Christmas Day (*for orders in Canada only):
For our brand NEW custom digital certificates: Place your orders until Dec. 20th.
For printed & mailed certificates: Place your orders by Dec. 13th
For all other AFA gear: Place your orders by Dec. 13th
*Please note: Despite our best efforts, we can’t guarantee your orders will arrive before Christmas day.
To purchase AFA gifts: Visit our online store Call us at 250 896 4007 Book an appointment to visit our office Give us a call at 250 896 4007 or email info@staging.ancientforestalliance.org
Proceeds help assist our work to protect endangered old-growth forests and to ensure a sustainable, second-growth forest industry in BC.
Thank you for considering the AFA as your priority organization to support this holiday season!
http://15.223.158.206/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/AFA-Staff-Sept-2019-60.jpg8001200TJ Watthttps://staging.ancientforestalliance.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/10/cropped-AFA-Logo-1000px.pngTJ Watt2021-12-03 16:11:412023-04-06 19:05:44Planning to give AFA gifts this holiday season? Order soon!
We’ve benefitted from exceptionally awesome projects lately. Thank you to the following businesses, groups, and individuals:
Guru Organic Energy Drink for their generous donation. Guru recently released episode 2 of their “True Nature Series” called “Full Circle” featuring athlete and artist, Joel Fuller. Thanks, Joel and all involved for bringing awareness to the AFA and endangered ancient forests in BC: https://www.guruenergy.com/en-ca/stories/joel-k-fuller-one-with-nature
Patagonia Victoria for their dynamic and ongoing support including contributing through their 1% for the planet commitments, donating proceeds from a recent film night, and hosting a selection of AFA gear in their retail shop in downtown Vic.
Good Natured Wine & Andrew Peller Limited for donating $1 from every bottle of Good Nature wine at select Save on Foods locations earlier this fall.
Jeff Nytch for donating proceeds from the successful production of “The Song of the Lorax” which featured images by AFA’s TJ Watt. Thank you also to his supporters for their additional contributions. https://www.jeffreynytch.com/lorax
Evergrow Christmas Trees for their support and for signing a resolution in solidarity of protecting endangered old-growth forests in BC. https://evergrowchristmastrees.ca/
Author Rhonda Kokosha for donating following the launch of a new book “I Really Like the Trees Outside” meant to inspire children and adults alike to appreciate trees and nature. www.rhondakokosha.com
Melissa MacGregor for donating partial proceeds from sales of a fine art landscape painting. Visit https://melissacritchlow.com/ to learn more about the print and order details.
Arrowmaker Accounting for including the AFA among their donation commitments to protect endangered old-growth forests in BC. www.arrowmaker.ca
However big or small the gesture, we appreciate it! Thank you.
http://15.223.158.206/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/Eldred-Valley-Sept-2021-446.jpg10001500TJ Watthttps://staging.ancientforestalliance.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/10/cropped-AFA-Logo-1000px.pngTJ Watt2021-12-03 12:42:012023-04-06 19:05:44Thank you to our recent business supporters
VICTORIA (Unceded Lekwungen Territories) – Conservationists with the Ancient Forest Alliance (AFA) are raising concerns over Interfor’s plans to log 33 cutblocks, totaling 55 hectares, in rare, intact old-growth forest along the coastline of western Vancouver Island and are calling on the BC government to commit conservation funding to support immediate protection of at-risk old-growth forests.
The approved cutblocks, which members of the AFA visited and explored in summer 2021, are located in Vernon Bay, a stunning stretch of coastal old-growth forest in Barkley Sound in the territories of the Uchucklesaht and Tseshaht nations. Conservationists measured unprotected monumental redcedar trees up to 12 feet in diameter.
Some of the ancient forests found here, where the BC government only recently granted approval for logging, have since been identified by the province’s independent Old Growth Technical Advisory Panel (TAP) for immediate deferral due to their very large old-growth trees. Despite the province having accepted, in principle, the TAP’s recommendation to defer logging in 2.6 million hectares of at-risk old-growth forests across BC last month, logging in the Vernon Bay cutblocks will likely proceed unless the local First Nations and the province immediately enact deferrals.
AFA Photographer and Campaigner TJ Watt beside a monumental redcedar tree measuring 12ft (3.6m) wide, growing unprotected in the ancient forests of Vernon Bay in Barkley Sound in Uchucklesaht and Tseshaht Nation territories.
“These are some of the most remarkable and beautiful coastal old-growth forests we’ve explored this year,” stated AFA campaigner and photographer TJ Watt. “It’s incredibly rare to come across a large, intact stretch of unprotected ancient forest like this today. Allowing logging to proceed would turn these lush forests into a patchwork of ugly clearcuts.”
“Significant conservation funding is needed from the provincial government to support forestry-dependent communities where old-growth forests are protected, which would help ensure that the science panel’s deferral recommendations can be fully implemented. The federal government has put hundreds of millions of dollars on the table for permanent protection. It’s time for the province to meet or exceed that amount.”
Nine of the 33 approved cutblocks are also located within a “non-legal” Old Growth Management Area (OGMA), the result of a legal loophole that allows old-growth forests that have been identified for protection to still be logged.
“Non-legal OGMAs are areas that have been mapped, but haven’t been legalized by a ministerial Order,” stated Watt. “Some of these OGMAs have remained in draft form for as long as a decade, allowing forest companies to cherry-pick the best trees from them in exchange for setting aside forests that are less commercially and ecologically valuable elsewhere. One of the simplest steps the province could immediately take to protect old-growth would be to legalize all non-legal OGMA’s,” stated Watt.
The coastal old-growth in Vernon Bay comprises a habitat for diverse and abundant wildlife, including gray wolves, and is designated as an Important Bird Area for marbled murrelets, an old-growth forest-dependent seabird. Barkley Sound is also a renowned destination for sea kayakers and supports countless marine life, including Orcas, Humpback Whales, and Pacific Gray Whales. With many of the proposed cutblocks located immediately adjacent to the shoreline, the AFA is also concerned the logging will have adverse impacts on the area’s visual quality.
Overlooking the unprotected ancient forests of Vernon Bay in Barkley Sound in Uchucklesaht and Tseshaht Nation territories. 33 logging cutblocks have been approved in this region, some overlapping with the newly recommended deferral areas.
“Approaching the coastline by water, you can easily imagine earlier times when the island was blanketed with intact forests,” said Ian Illuminato, AFA Campaigner. “While its remote location has allowed Vernon Bay to remain largely intact for now, this area and others like it could be lost unless the BC government immediately commits funding to support the development of Indigenous Protected Areas through First Nations land use planning initiatives, which first requires logging deferrals,” said Illuminato.
“Recent studies have shown that old-growth forests are worth far more standing than logged, in terms of economics and in terms of climate change. Considering the catastrophic impacts of climate change felt throughout BC this year, it’s hard to imagine why we would choose to continue eliminating one of our best defenses against drought, floods, and fires through destructive old-growth clearcutting.”
http://15.223.158.206/wp-content/uploads/2021/11/Vernon-Bay-Barkely-Sound.jpg4981500TJ Watthttps://staging.ancientforestalliance.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/10/cropped-AFA-Logo-1000px.pngTJ Watt2021-12-03 10:03:252023-04-06 19:05:44West coast old-growth forests recommended for deferral in Vancouver Island’s Barkley Sound at risk of logging.
We’re excited to share that AFA photographer TJ Watt was featured in CBC’s podcast, The Doc Project: Big Tree Hunt, which highlights his efforts to explore, document, and protect ancient forests in B.C.
Tune in to hear more about TJ’s photography and conservation work and join a remote bushwhacking mission to Vernon Bay in Barkley Sound in the territory of the Uchucklesaht and Tseshaht First Nations, where they explore the area’s incredible-yet-unprotected ancient forests and find monumental redcedar trees up to 12 feet in diameter at risk of being logged.
Photographer of giant old-growth trees has ‘best and worst job in the world’
CBC Radio
November 26, 2021
TJ Watt’s before-and-after shots in clearcut forests part of renewed movement to protect B.C.’s oldest trees.
On an overcast day last August, TJ Watt made his way around the trunk of a giant western red cedar. In one hand, he clutched a yellow measuring tape. With his other, he pushed away a thick undergrowth of salal and ferns.
“It’s a small hike just to get around this thing,” Watt called out. A moment later, he read the measurement of the tree’s girth: a whopping 11.6 metres.
It was the biggest tree that Watt had found all day. To get here, he had hiked several hours off-trail, bushwhacking through dense, moss-laden rainforest, near Barkley Sound on Vancouver Island’s rugged west coast.
An aerial view of unprotected old-growth forests along the coastline of Barkley Sound in the territory of the Uchucklesaht and Tseshaht First Nations. (TJ Watt)
The Victoria-based photographer and activist has spent much of the past 15 years searching for and photographing some of Canada’s biggest, oldest trees. The trees he finds are often upwards of a thousand years old and wide enough to drive a car through.
His backcountry quests are more than just adventures though. Most of the trees that Watt finds are slated to be cut down. Watt’s photographs, which he posts on social media, have become a powerful tool for ramping up public support to protect B.C.’s old-growth forests.
“It can be hard to capture the complexity and the whole essence of this issue,” says Watt, who co-founded the non-profit advocacy group Ancient Forest Alliance 10 years ago. “You have to somehow find a single image that encapsulates all of that, and the feelings that go with it.”
Old-growth logging has long been contentious in B.C. The debate first made headlines in the early 1990s, when hundreds of protesters gathered near Clayoquot Sound for the so-called “war in the woods.”
The protests garnered international media attention and shone a spotlight on logging practices in the province. Clayoquot Sound was ultimately protected and local First Nations have stewarded the area’s forests ever since. But elsewhere in B.C., old-growth logging continued.
In the last fiscal year, the province said $1.3 billion in revenue and more than 50,000 jobs were linked to the forestry sector. Logging is particularly important for some smaller, more remote communities, says Jim Girvan, a forestry economist and former director of the Truck Loggers Association. “If the forest industry wasn’t there operating, those small towns would eventually become ghost towns,” Girvan said.
An old-growth tree is defined in B.C. as one that is older than 250 years in coastal forests, or 140 years in interior forests. According to provincial data, roughly 50,000 hectares of old-growth forest are cut annually. The older, bigger trees tend to have the highest value, says Girvan, which is important for an industry that’s been struggling to keep afloat. “Old-growth logs, for example, are very good for making guitars, and that’s one of the products that a lot of people come to British Columbia for,” he explained.
For his part, Watt says he’s not opposed to logging but argues that it needs to be done differently — for example, in second-growth tree plantations, which replace old-growth forests lost to fire and logging, with trees re-logged every 50-60 years. Watt also feels “there should be a more value-added side to the industry.” Rather than exporting raw logs to other countries, Watt says, those logs should be processed in B.C. to make higher-end products.
Watt’s photographs have also led to a different economic opportunity: tourism. A stand of thousand-year old conifers near Port Renfrew, known as Avatar Grove, was protected after Watt’s photos caught the attention of hikers, ecologists and activists 10 years ago. Today, the area is a protected park and draws thousands of tourists every summer seeking big trees.
Still, many of the trees that Watt has photographed have been cut down. Last year, he hiked into the Caycuse Valley, a few hours north of Victoria, just as logging was set to begin. He decided to try something different: photographing the forest before—and after—it was cleared. “I remember thinking that by tomorrow morning [these trees] won’t be here,” he said. “It’s a very odd experience to feel that you’re essentially taking a portrait of something in its final days.”
Watt returned after logging was complete and took photos from the same vantage points. Then he posted the before-and-after series on social media. The response was almost immediate, he says. “When you refresh the page just a few minutes later and it’s already got a hundred comments and a thousand shares, you can tell that it’s going to blow up in a big way.”
The photos generated some two million views on social media, along with international media coverage, and sparked public outcry. Since then, tensions over old-growth logging have reached a boiling point with more than 900 protesters arrested at anti-logging blockades in the Fairy Creek watershed—not far from the Caycuse Valley where Watt took the before-and-after photos.
In early November—facing increasing public pressure—the B.C. government announced, in principle, a temporary halt to logging in 2.6 million hectares of old-growth forests. The province stated its “intention to work in partnership with First Nations” to develop forest sustainability plans while logging of certain rare old-growth trees is deferred. If the deferrals become permanent, the province estimates that up to 4,500 jobs could be lost. Industry officials have suggested that number could be four times higher.
The announcement came a year and a half after the provincially commissioned old-growth strategy review panel released its recommendations, calling for a “paradigm shift” in logging practices. The panel called for a more ecological approach to managing B.C.’s forests, and a stronger oversight role for First Nations.
“The small communities and logging contractors we spoke with were just as concerned about not losing biological diversity, not damaging our environment, as the people who are protesting out the windows,” said Al Gorley, co-chair of the old-growth review panel.
The provincial announcement came as welcome news for Watt. The giant western red cedar that he’d photographed near Barkley Sound this summer is located in one of the logging deferral areas, meaning it won’t be cut down any time soon.
After more than a decade of documenting trees before they’re cut down, Watt sounded cautiously optimistic. “At the end of the day, I need to know that I did everything I could to make a difference,” he said. “Hopefully our efforts pay off.”
“I think for someone who loves trees,” he added, “I have the best job and the worst job in the world.”
http://15.223.158.206/wp-content/uploads/2021/11/927094194_TJinCaycusebeforeandafter.7.sized_.thumb_.jpg.afc0d79a6cfb1e332ae1422fc69c8c7e.jpg7391000TJ Watthttps://staging.ancientforestalliance.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/10/cropped-AFA-Logo-1000px.pngTJ Watt2021-11-30 17:25:322023-04-06 19:05:44TJ Watt Featured in CBC’s Podcast, The Doc Project: Big Tree Hunt
In September 2021, Ancient Forest Alliance visited the city of Powell River to explore the region’s remaining old-growth forests, and meet with local community members and the Tla’amin First Nation to hear their views on the conservation of old-growth forests in the region. We experienced awe-inspiring landscapes, stunning ancient rainforests, and fascinating perspectives on old-growth conservation.
The area around Powell River has been stewarded since time immemorial by the Tla’amin and shíshálh First Nations. Since its founding, the town of Powell River has been deeply defined by the forest industry. Its valleys of monumental forests were easily accessible, and industrial logging has been ongoing in the region since the 19th century. Long dominated by its huge pulp mill, Powell River is a growing destination for ecotourism.
I (Ian Thomas) and TJ Watt were invited by the local qathet Old-Growth group to highlight some of the remaining old-growth forests in the Powell River region. We were joined by filmmaker Robin Munshaw to film a second community spotlight video about old-growth conservation in this magnificent area. We were generously hosted by local advocate Rachel Sherstad, who invited us to stay at her beautiful organic farm just outside the city of Powell River.
Massive granite walls, popular with local rock climbers, tower thousands of feet into the air in the Eldred Valley.
The towering granite walls of the Eldred River Valley.
Mt. Freda
On the first day, we went up Mt. Freda with Erik Blaney. Erik is a member of the Tla’amin First Nation and has been a strong voice for old-growth conservation in his territory. Recently, the Tla’amin requested that Western Forest Products pause all old-growth logging in their territory. One of their paused cutblocks on Mt. Freda is 21 hectares (52 acres) in size and is located at over 1,100 metres (3,609 feet) above sea level. The steep, winding road that snaked up the mountain to this paused cutblock was a powerful reminder of the extreme lengths that logging companies are going to in order to carve out the last vestiges of old-growth forest from the landscape. Stands of sub-alpine rainforests like these represent the most ancient forests known in Canada. Members of the qathet Old-Growth group found that some of the trees logged on Mt. Freda were over 1,200 years old. If these trees were artifacts or buildings, they would be treasured in museums or protected by law; but in 21st century Canada, it’s completely legal to blast a road through sensitive mountain wetlands, cut down a tree well into its second millennium, and leave behind a stump field where an ancient forest once stood. It is hard to find the words to capture the antiquity of these forests when the trees themselves are older than the English language as we know it.
Erik Blaney of the Tla’amin First Nation between two ancient yellow cedars on Mt. Freda.
During our interview with Erik, we learned that, twenty years ago, when the Tla’amin nation was seeking a tree from which to carve a traditional ocean-going canoe, they searched their vast territory and could only find six suitable trees. Out of the thousands of usable old-growth trees that would have been present a century ago, only six remained.
A giant old-growth yellow cedar within an approved cutblock, now temporarily deferred
After interviewing Erik, we explored the still-standing portion of the approved cutblock. We found giant yellow cedars, likely over a thousand years old, towering over slopes that glowed with blue-green blueberry shrubs. The soft forest floor was braided by little creeks meandering through mossy beds, filling the woods with constant music of falling water. Few forests anywhere have such a sense of timeless peace as these primeval sub-alpine groves. Nearby, picturesque alpine tarns were glowing with soft reds and golds as Autumn began its slow creep down the mountainside. High in the mountains and locked in by snow for much of the year, these forests are incredibly slow-growing, delicate ecosystems. For this reason, it’s more accurate to call the clearcutting of them a form of “tree-mining” rather than forestry, as it will be many generations before such forests ever recover from the destructive clearcutting that is BC’s standard forestry practice.
It’s sobering to think that without the leadership and initiative of Erik Blaney and the Tla’amin First Nation, this timeless forest we were exploring would’ve been completely erased. Without any action by the provincial government to help transition communities away from old-growth logging, this site could still be logged. Erik explained the economic challenges that the Tla’amin nation faces in protecting their remnant stands of valuable, ancient trees. Erik emphasized that he believes vast tribal parks are necessary to protect Tla’amin culture and that the province of British Columbia needs to provide significant funds to realize that goal.
Eldred Valley
The next day we headed to the Eldred Valley. This majestic valley is revered among rock climbers across Canada for its magnificent battlements of towering granite. We were joined in our exploration by Dr. Andrew Bryant, an ecologist with a lifetime of experience researching wildlife in coastal British Columbia. The lion’s share of Andrew’s work has been in saving the endangered Vancouver Island marmot from extinction. He has also done research on the old-growth-dependent marbled murrelet and led pioneering work on how forest-dwelling birds respond to different methods of logging. His decades of experience studying coastal ecology provided a fascinating perspective on the ecological importance of old-growth forests.
On our way into the Eldred, we stopped at Goat Mountain. Andrew told us that in the fall, the local natural history club comes to this spot to watch mountain goats foraging on the sheer cliffs. Though iconically associated with the treeless expanses of ice and rock that dominate the forbidding peaks of British Columbia’s mountains, this monarch of the alpine realm is actually dependent on the rainforest for its survival. The Coast Mountains experience extreme winter snowfall, and mountain goats here must retreat to forested winter ranges to access the forage that will keep them alive through the winter. The BC government’s own conservation plan for mountain goats identifies the loss of old-growth forests as a key threat to their survival. The mountain goat then is a crucial reminder of the way in which old-growth forests sustain a huge variety of creatures that seem only tenuously connected to them: from coho salmon deep in the Pacific Ocean to a mountain goat perched high on a granite slab
default
As we entered the Eldred and saw on all sides its soaring granite walls, we immediately understood the reason for its legendary status in the climbing community. There was an indescribable majesty in watching the clouds drift through the valley; the peaks looked like huge islands washed by foaming surf, and we were mesmerized by the always-shifting pageantry of cloud and stone, broken by sudden windows of dazzling sunlight. Contrasting with the primeval wildness of these monumental stone faces was the heavily exploited forest of the valley. It was like the entire valley floor had been gouged with an enormous ice cream scoop, with the only remaining old-growth forests hanging on in tenacious little slivers of dark green on the very fringes of sheer rock. Despite driving for over three hours up the Eldred on rough logging roads, we still couldn’t reach any accessible old-growth to showcase in our interview with Andrew. Eventually, we settled in front of the castle-like stump of what had once been an ancient redcedar and listened to Andrew explain the critical ecological importance of ancient forests.
After interviewing Andrew, we were determined to see any scrap of remaining old-growth that we could, so we set out in search of the shreds of old-growth still clinging to the upper walls of the Eldred. We hiked up through a gloomy second-growth forest where the closed canopy of young trees blocks out the necessary light for understory dwelling shrubs and forbs. Such barren forests are deserts to foraging deer and for the wolves and cougars that depend on them. We had driven three hours deep into the Eldred and, though we hiked further and further up, we still couldn’t find a single old-growth tree. As we climbed higher, the ground fell away on all sides until we were walking a narrow ridge, only wide enough for us to continue in single file. This slender bridge led directly into a remnant stand of ancient forest
Conservation Biologist Andrew Bryant beside a massive cedar stump amongst second-growth in the Eldred Valley.
Dr. Andrew Bryant beside a giant cedar stump in second-growth.
Unprotected monumental redcedars can still be found at the base of of some of the climbing walls in the valley.
The moment we set foot in the old-growth grove, we passed through a threshold into another world. After the dark, lifeless gloom of the logged-over second-growth, suddenly there was light and green and life. We’ve had the privilege to explore many ancient groves in BC, and still, we were stunned by the beauty we’d stumbled into. The glade was split by a stream of clear water overhung with devil’s club, blueberry, and sword fern. The forest floor was a gently sloping garden of oak fern and queen’s cup. Rising above it all, were the magnificent trunks of enormous redcedars; ancient monarchs still ruling this quiet glade as they had for centuries. As we wandered through this garden of giants, we found the daybeds of animals nestled among the roots of the colossal cedars, and on their bark, the claw marks of bears. This grove was clearly a precious oasis for the wildlife of the region. We could easily imagine them creeping up, just like we had, through the vast wasteland of second-growth forest, so they could rest or feed in this far-flung refuge, nestled against the granite teeth of the Eldred.
From this vantage point, we could see the popular climbing wall of Amon Rudh and its dark green beard of remaining old-growth. Amon Rudh is named after a mountain in J.R.R. Tolkien’s world of Middle Earth. In Tolkien’s legendarium, this mountain is the refuge of the doomed hero Turin, who takes shelter there from the conquering forces of Tolkien’s primeval dark lord. Tolkien was a pioneer in the way he linked the traditional struggles of good and evil – expected from fantasy – with vivid imagery of ecological devastation. It’s not lost on anyone who knows the story of Amon Rudh, a symbol of heroic resistance to the forces of destruction, that the Eldred’s Amon Rudh holds some of the last remnants of healthy forest in a valley nearly conquered by clearcut logging. In recent years, the local climbing community of Powell River has been actively opposing plans to clearcut this last, tiny trace of the Eldred’s ancient rainforests.
Local advocate and qathet Old-Growth member, Jill Marie Bronson.
On our third day, we interviewed Jill Marie Bronson, one of the founders of the qathet Old-Growth group. She’s been doing fantastic work documenting and advocating for old-growth forests in the Powell River region. Jill Marie defies the stereotype of your average old-growth forest advocate. Deeply connected to BC’s logging industry, Jill Marie’s father works as a tree-faller and she herself has worked in laying out cutblocks. Educated in forestry, Jill Marie provided a fascinating and insightful perspective on the old-growth forest issues in the region.
That afternoon, we headed out of Powell River, reflecting on our fascinating three-day adventure. We interviewed people with diverse perspectives on biology, forestry, economics, and First Nations culture. Yet, despite these varied backgrounds, the consensus was clear: things need to change. The Powell River region is a perfect microcosm of the issues facing First Nations and forestry communities across British Columbia. How can they transition away from old-growth logging? Despite a history deeply steeped in forestry, community members from all different backgrounds are increasingly sounding the alarm on the destruction and unsustainable future of old-growth logging. They’re asking for leadership and financial support from a provincial government that still seems unwilling to act.
http://15.223.158.206/wp-content/uploads/2021/11/Eldred-Valley-Sept-2021-580.jpg10001500TJ Watthttps://staging.ancientforestalliance.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/10/cropped-AFA-Logo-1000px.pngTJ Watt2021-11-29 15:55:162025-02-11 12:15:06Notes From the Field: Powell River Trip
Watch our new community spotlight video featuring the ancient forests of Mt. Freda and the Eldred Valley near the town of Powell River on the west coast of BC. The region, which is home to Canada’s oldest recorded trees, has been stewarded by the Tla’amin, shíshálh, Klahoose, and K’ómoks, First Nations since time immemorial.
http://15.223.158.206/wp-content/uploads/2021/11/Eric-Blaney-and-mt.-freda-yellowcedars.jpg10001500TJ Watthttps://staging.ancientforestalliance.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/10/cropped-AFA-Logo-1000px.pngTJ Watt2021-11-24 14:31:172023-04-06 19:05:45New community spotlight video: Mt. Freda & Eldred Valley
Located in Tla’amin First Nation territory, outside the town of Powell River, the Eldred Valley is legendary among rock climbers for its towering granite peaks while also supporting some of the last vestiges of old-growth forest in the region. These magnificent groves are home to monumental western redcedars and Douglas-firs, and provide critical habitat for wildlife in the valley.
Most recently, the BC government has identified a number of at-risk ancient groves in the Eldred Valley for potential logging deferrals, including some of the forest pictured here. Significant funding for First Nations is now urgently needed to make these deferrals possible.
http://15.223.158.206/wp-content/uploads/2021/11/Eldred-Valley-Sept-2021-76.jpg9991500TJ Watthttps://staging.ancientforestalliance.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/10/cropped-AFA-Logo-1000px.pngTJ Watt2021-11-18 09:51:132024-10-05 11:27:35Photos: Eldred River Valley
Located in the territory of the Tla’amin and shíshálh First Nations, and close to the town of Powell River, Mt. Freda is home to some of the oldest trees in Canada.
Currently, the logging of the remaining ancient forests of Mt. Freda has paused thanks to the leadership and initiative of the Tla’amin First Nation who requested a temporary halt to any old-growth logging in their territory. Most recently, the BC government has identified a number of at-risk ancient groves on Mt. Freda for potential logging deferrals, including some of the forest pictured here.
Send a (NEW!) instant message to the BC government, demanding they must step up and commit at least $300 million dollars in provincial funding to support Indigenous Protected Areas to permanently protect old-growth forests and sustainable economic alternatives for First Nations communities across BC: https://staging.ancientforestalliance.org/funding-send-a-message/
http://15.223.158.206/wp-content/uploads/2021/11/Mt-Freda-Sept-2021-92.jpg10001500TJ Watthttps://staging.ancientforestalliance.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/10/cropped-AFA-Logo-1000px.pngTJ Watt2021-11-18 09:41:102024-10-05 11:28:14Photos: Mount Freda Ancient Forests – qathet Region
Watt’s dramatic images of coastal forests—before and after logging—have helped everyone better understand what’s being lost.
THERE WERE A FEW TIMES, as TJ Watt slogged through a sea of stumps and barren clearcuts, that he questioned whether anyone cared that trees, which had grown for centuries and supported intricate networks of species, had been destroyed forever.
“You sometimes wonder ‘why am I even doing this? Is it really making a difference,’” said Watt, a photographer and campaigner for the Ancient Forest Alliance whose dramatic before-and-after pictures of old-growth logging in BC recently went viral.
International shockwaves from his photographs of giant western red cedars in the Caycuse River watershed on southern Vancouver Island, strategically placed with after-logging images of massive stumps, helped focus attention on BC’s already controversial old-growth logging policies.
All photos above were taken in the Caycuse area of Vancouver Island by TJ Watt.
The reaction proved that, indeed, people do care.
“It says we are on the right track,” Watt said.
The images appeared in several major magazines and were recognized in three international photo competitions. Then, in October, Watt was named as a National Geographic Explorer and Royal Canadian Geographical Society Explorer.
Watt will also receive a Trebek Initiative grant, which will help fund more expeditions into remote areas where, out of sight of the general public, old-growth is being logged.
He hopes the recognition will allow him to reach a wider audience. “I think it just goes to show that this is truly a globally significant issue. These are some of the Earth’s largest and oldest trees and, here we are in a first-world country, and it is still legal to cut them down,” said Watt.
TJ Watt
The Trebek Initiative is named after Alex Trebek, the Canadian host of the popular television show Jeopardy, who died earlier this year. Trebek was an honorary president of the Royal Canadian Geographical Society and the grants, awarded for the first time this year, support explorers, scientists, photographers, geographers and educators who use storytelling to ignite “a passion to preserve.”
The recognition comes shortly after Watt’s latest release of photographs that are breath-taking for all the wrong reasons.
The pictures of scalped hillsides along the upper Mahatta River on northwestern Vancouver Island immediately drew horrified condemnation of BC’s old-growth forestry policies.
Scalped hillsides along the upper Mahatta River on northwestern Vancouver Island (photo by TJ Watt)The destruction on the ground at Mahatta River (photo by TJ Watt)
About 50 hectares around the Mahatta River, within the territory of Quatsino First Nation, was auctioned off by BC Timber Sales, and the photos show the raw reality of clearcutting, with slopes and the valley bottom denuded of old-growth trees, leaving only giant cedar stumps.
“[The photos] really struck a nerve with people. A lot of people see those images and think ‘didn’t we stop clearcutting like that back in the 1990s?’” Watt said.
The trees were cut last year and this year—after the Province received the Old Growth Strategic Review which called for a paradigm shift in the way BC manages ancient forests.
“This is one of the most atrocious examples of logging that I’ve seen in more than a decade,” said Watt, 37, who has worked on photography projects for the Ancient Forest Alliance since 2010.
The Province has committed to implementing the panel’s 14 recommendations, but, in the meantime, old-growth logging has accelerated and Forests Minister Katrine Conroy confirmed last month that, out of a total annual cut of about 200,000 hectares, 55,000 hectares are old growth.
Historically, before commercial logging, there were about 25-million hectares of old growth and government figures now put BC’s total forest at 56.2 million hectares of which 11.1 million hectares is old growth (not the 13.7-million hectares that government previously estimated).
The definition of coastal old growth is a forest with trees that are at least 250 years old and, in the Interior, trees that are at least 140 years old.
It’s too late for the Mahatta River forest, but Watt is holding out hope that people will no longer put up with such destruction elsewhere.
“The world is watching right now,” he said
“I’m hoping that the pressure of these images and the rest of the photographs we have been sharing are enough to push the government in the direction of doing the right thing.”
Recent BCTS logging at Mahatta River (photo by TJ Watt)
From skate-boarding hippie to making a difference with pictures
Watt’s interest in photography, which morphed into his crusade for old growth, started when he was a skate-boarding teenager, sporting dreadlocks and living in Metchosin.
“Like every young photographer, I figured I wanted to travel the world and shoot photos of far-flung places, but after a few months doing that and then coming home I realized the landscape in the forests right in my own back yard on Vancouver Island, are second to none and I decided to really focus my efforts here,” he said.
That commitment was cemented by a stint at the now-defunct Western Academy of Photography.
“It gave me a year to focus specifically on photography instead of doing all the construction and landscaping jobs I was doing. I knew I wanted to do photography related to nature and photography with a real purpose,” he said.
It was a decision that worried his family, Watt admits.
“If you tell your parents that you’re going to be an artist that saves trees and that’s how you’re going to make a living, they definitely roll their eyes at you and look concerned and worried,” he said.
“But, I can say, more than a decade later, they’re some of the proudest people around. You sometimes really do have to follow your gut, follow your dreams and believe it’s all going to work out.”
Andrea Kucherawy was program manager at the Western Academy of Photogaphy when Watt arrived as a student and she watched his potential develop.
“He definitely stood out for me,” said Kucherawy who has avidly followed his career.
Watt’s interest in environmental photography paralleled his interest in sports such as skateboarding, said Kucherawy, who is pleased he took the environmental route.
“I honestly don’t think we would be where we are now without the work he has done,” she said.
“People need a visual, a comparison and his before-and-after work often includes a human element to give a sense of scale and I think that’s what’s really empowering for the cause,” she said.
Ken Wu, who co-founded the Ancient Forest Alliance and is now executive director of the Endangered Ecosystems Alliance, first met Watt when he (Wu) was executive director of the Victoria chapter of the Wilderness Committee.
“He was this skateboarding hippie who always had a camera with him and he liked to take pictures of all the protests we were organizing,” Wu said.
“Then I sent him into the woods to take pictures of the old-growth forests and to build trails and it turned out that he had a great aptitude for trail building and outdoor activities in rugged landscapes,” he said.
When Wu split from the Wilderness Committee, one of his first moves was to hire TJ as the Ancient Forest Alliance’s first staff member.
One of the most celebrated early campaigns was sparked by the duo’s discovery of Avatar Grove, near Port Renfrew. TJ’s photos of the huge, gnarly trees and untouched forest, which was slated to be felled, sparked massive public interest.
Avatar Grove (photo by TJ Watt)Avatar Grove (photo by TJ Watt)
Avatar Grove has now become a tourist attraction and was pivotal in the transformation of Port Renfrew from a logging town to a destination for people who want to see big trees.
It was the right time in history, noted Wu: the movie Avatar—which has a story line about saving a forest on another planet—was taking the world by storm; and TJ’s growing camera skills, combined with the rise of Facebook, allowed his photos of the discovery of a spectacular grove of trees in an accessible area to be shared around the world.
“I recognized that TJ’s photos could be news media in and of themselves because they could be shared on that new platform,” Wu said.
“They really hit home. It’s a visual shock. It’s like harpooned whales or rhinos with their horns cut off, you get it a lot more quickly than all of my emails about productivity distinctions and tenure regulations,” he said.
Edward Burtynsky, one of Canada’s best-known photographers, who focuses on global industrial landscapes, came across TJ when he was looking at photographing big trees and BC’s northern rainforest.
All his research led to TJ and a loose collaboration started, said Burtynsky, who was impressed with the power of the photographs and the direction of the Ancient Forest Alliance campaigns.
“When you name an area and name a tree it’s a really powerful way to save them,” he said.
Now, in the age of iPhones, images have become one of the most powerful and fluid forms of communication, putting eyes on parts of the world that most people cannot witness first-hand, Burtynsky said.
“Those before-and-after images I believe really drive the point home. You look at a tree that is 500, 700 or even 1,000 years old that sprouted before the medieval age and is now going to be sent somewhere else—not even here—to be cut into boards for decking. There’s something terribly wrong with that image,” he said.
“I can’t see a more compelling way to tell that story than letting people look at that majestic tree and then [look at it again] after the loggers have been in.”
Before and after images of logging of old-growth forest on Vancouver Island (photos by TJ Watt)
Sonia Furstenau, leader of the BC Green Party, said Watt’s photographs illustrate the gap between logging practices on the ground and the story that government tries to tell.
“Thirty years ago, the world was paying attention because we were clearcutting old-growth forests. Well, nothing has changed,” she said.
“We have accepted this approach to forestry that puts mechanization and efficiency above, not only ecosystem protection, but also above jobs,” said Furstenau, pointing out that increasing volumes of timber are being cut with fewer and fewer people working in the industry.
“When you see these images that TJ has so beautifully captured of before and after, what he shows is the real devastation of these logging practices,” Furstenau said.
A huge emotional toll in witnessing the destruction
The accolades for Watt come at a pivotal point as the provincial government announced in early November that logging will be deferred on 2.6 million hectares of old growth for two years while it consults with the province’s 204 First Nations.
The deferrals are based on new mapping, identifying areas of old growth where there is imminent risk of biodiversity loss. BC Timber Sales, the government agency that hands out logging contracts for 20 percent of the province’s annual allowable cut—and which has been heavily criticized for auctioning off some of the most controversial areas of old growth—will immediately stop advertising and selling parcels in the deferral areas.
It is positive that government is now using independent mapping, based on science, to identify old-growth forests at risk and that mapping confirms that many of BC’s forests are at risk of irreversible biodiversity loss, Watt said.
However, details and provincial funding are missing although the federal government has committed $50-million to help protect BC’s ancient forests, noted Watt.
“Without a matching provincial commitment of several hundred million dollars in conservation funding, with a primary focus on First Nations economic relief linked to deferrals, the full scale of the deferrals and eventual permanent protection will be impossible to achieve,” he said.
“We have the road map in hand, but we’re missing the gas in the tank,” he said.
That means the clock is ticking as the ever-shrinking remains of BC’s old-growth forests are continuing to fall and Watt suspects it will be impossible to avoid more before-and-after pictures—and they are never easy.
The chance to inform the public about forestry practices in the hidden corners of the province is a privilege, but it leaves scars, Watt admits.
“There’s a huge emotional toll and compounding ecological grief to witnessing the disappearance and destruction of these truly irreplaceable forests,” he said.
“It even causes a lot of anger, because I know that every day there’s a delay in ensuring these forests are protected, some of them are gone forever. Trees may come back, but never the ancient forests that are so humbling and awe-inspiring.”
As an example, he described how retracing his steps through the Caycuse after the machines had done their worst, was like looking at the death of old friends.
The idea of irretrievable loss when old-growth forests are cut was echoed by Gary Merkel, one of the authors of the Old Growth Strategic Review and a member of the technical advisory panel on the recent deferrals.
Speaking at the news conference Merkel emphasized the importance of the underlying ecosystems in old-growth forests: “Some of our ecosystems in British Columbia remain relatively undisturbed since the last ice-age, more than 10,000 years,” he said.
“We can grow new trees, they are renewable. These ecosystems, in most cases, are not renewable. They will never come back in a lifetime and possibly ever because of climate change,” he said.
Watt’s photographs have helped make British Columbians aware of what was happening in the remote reaches of Vancouver Island. Despite the toll, Watt is committed to continuing his work on behalf of the forest: “Unless we go on these trips to try to expose them, the forests would disappear without anybody knowing about it.”
http://15.223.158.206/wp-content/uploads/2021/11/1341657734_TJinCaycusebeforeandafter.7.sized_.jpg.d55481bd88c3e32e46f48e9de21af6ef.jpg11081500TJ Watthttps://staging.ancientforestalliance.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/10/cropped-AFA-Logo-1000px.pngTJ Watt2021-11-16 12:35:072023-04-06 19:05:45Photographer TJ Watt wins accolades for showing the world the destruction of old-growth forests in BC
Photos: Vernon Bay
/in Photo GalleryThis past summer, AFA had the privilege of exploring stunning ancient forests along the shores of Vernon Bay in Barkley Sound. Home to the Uchucklesaht and Tseshaht First Nations, TJ Watt and Ian Illuminato measured monumental redcedar trees up to 12 feet in diameter.
Photo gallery: Vernon Bay
Despite the area’s significance, the BC government has granted approval for the logging company, Interfor, to cut a total of 55 hectares of rare, intact ancient forests. However, due to the recent 2.6 million hectares of potential old-growth deferrals announced by the province, some stands have been identified for immediate deferrals.
These forests are now at imminent risk of being logged unless the local First Nations and the province immediately enact these deferrals. Speak up now! Demand the BC government commit conservation funding to support Indigenous-led protection of at-risk old-growth by sending a message.
See our media release for further details.
Planning to give AFA gifts this holiday season? Order soon!
/in AnnouncementsFriendly reminder, if you’re planning on ordering AFA gifts this holiday season, please place your order by the following deadlines to increase your likelihood of receiving your gifts before Christmas Day (*for orders in Canada only):
For our brand NEW custom digital certificates:
Place your orders until Dec. 20th.
For printed & mailed certificates:
Place your orders by Dec. 13th
For Prints:
Place your orders by Dec. 8th.
For all other AFA gear:
Place your orders by Dec. 13th
*Please note: Despite our best efforts, we can’t guarantee your orders will arrive before Christmas day.
To purchase AFA gifts:
Visit our online store
Call us at 250 896 4007
Book an appointment to visit our office
Give us a call at 250 896 4007 or email info@staging.ancientforestalliance.org
Proceeds help assist our work to protect endangered old-growth forests and to ensure a sustainable, second-growth forest industry in BC.
Thank you for considering the AFA as your priority organization to support this holiday season!
Thank you to our recent business supporters
/in Thank YouWe’ve benefitted from exceptionally awesome projects lately. Thank you to the following businesses, groups, and individuals:
Guru Organic Energy Drink for their generous donation. Guru recently released episode 2 of their “True Nature Series” called “Full Circle” featuring athlete and artist, Joel Fuller. Thanks, Joel and all involved for bringing awareness to the AFA and endangered ancient forests in BC: https://www.guruenergy.com/en-ca/stories/joel-k-fuller-one-with-nature
Patagonia Victoria for their dynamic and ongoing support including contributing through their 1% for the planet commitments, donating proceeds from a recent film night, and hosting a selection of AFA gear in their retail shop in downtown Vic.
Good Natured Wine & Andrew Peller Limited for donating $1 from every bottle of Good Nature wine at select Save on Foods locations earlier this fall.
Jeff Nytch for donating proceeds from the successful production of “The Song of the Lorax” which featured images by AFA’s TJ Watt. Thank you also to his supporters for their additional contributions. https://www.jeffreynytch.com/lorax
OneUp Components for their awesome support two years in a row. https://www.oneupcomponents.com/
Evergrow Christmas Trees for their support and for signing a resolution in solidarity of protecting endangered old-growth forests in BC. https://evergrowchristmastrees.ca/
West Coast Trail Express for their generosity. https://trailbus.com/
Hemp & Company for their many years of support. https://hempandcompany.com/
Author Rhonda Kokosha for donating following the launch of a new book “I Really Like the Trees Outside” meant to inspire children and adults alike to appreciate trees and nature. www.rhondakokosha.com
Melissa MacGregor for donating partial proceeds from sales of a fine art landscape painting. Visit https://melissacritchlow.com/ to learn more about the print and order details.
Arrowmaker Accounting for including the AFA among their donation commitments to protect endangered old-growth forests in BC. www.arrowmaker.ca
Double Diamond Law for contributing in several ways to the ancient forest movement. https://doublediamondlaw.com/
However big or small the gesture, we appreciate it! Thank you.
West coast old-growth forests recommended for deferral in Vancouver Island’s Barkley Sound at risk of logging.
/in Media ReleaseVICTORIA (Unceded Lekwungen Territories) – Conservationists with the Ancient Forest Alliance (AFA) are raising concerns over Interfor’s plans to log 33 cutblocks, totaling 55 hectares, in rare, intact old-growth forest along the coastline of western Vancouver Island and are calling on the BC government to commit conservation funding to support immediate protection of at-risk old-growth forests.
The approved cutblocks, which members of the AFA visited and explored in summer 2021, are located in Vernon Bay, a stunning stretch of coastal old-growth forest in Barkley Sound in the territories of the Uchucklesaht and Tseshaht nations. Conservationists measured unprotected monumental redcedar trees up to 12 feet in diameter.
Some of the ancient forests found here, where the BC government only recently granted approval for logging, have since been identified by the province’s independent Old Growth Technical Advisory Panel (TAP) for immediate deferral due to their very large old-growth trees. Despite the province having accepted, in principle, the TAP’s recommendation to defer logging in 2.6 million hectares of at-risk old-growth forests across BC last month, logging in the Vernon Bay cutblocks will likely proceed unless the local First Nations and the province immediately enact deferrals.
“These are some of the most remarkable and beautiful coastal old-growth forests we’ve explored this year,” stated AFA campaigner and photographer TJ Watt. “It’s incredibly rare to come across a large, intact stretch of unprotected ancient forest like this today. Allowing logging to proceed would turn these lush forests into a patchwork of ugly clearcuts.”
“Significant conservation funding is needed from the provincial government to support forestry-dependent communities where old-growth forests are protected, which would help ensure that the science panel’s deferral recommendations can be fully implemented. The federal government has put hundreds of millions of dollars on the table for permanent protection. It’s time for the province to meet or exceed that amount.”
Nine of the 33 approved cutblocks are also located within a “non-legal” Old Growth Management Area (OGMA), the result of a legal loophole that allows old-growth forests that have been identified for protection to still be logged.
“Non-legal OGMAs are areas that have been mapped, but haven’t been legalized by a ministerial Order,” stated Watt. “Some of these OGMAs have remained in draft form for as long as a decade, allowing forest companies to cherry-pick the best trees from them in exchange for setting aside forests that are less commercially and ecologically valuable elsewhere. One of the simplest steps the province could immediately take to protect old-growth would be to legalize all non-legal OGMA’s,” stated Watt.
The coastal old-growth in Vernon Bay comprises a habitat for diverse and abundant wildlife, including gray wolves, and is designated as an Important Bird Area for marbled murrelets, an old-growth forest-dependent seabird. Barkley Sound is also a renowned destination for sea kayakers and supports countless marine life, including Orcas, Humpback Whales, and Pacific Gray Whales. With many of the proposed cutblocks located immediately adjacent to the shoreline, the AFA is also concerned the logging will have adverse impacts on the area’s visual quality.
“Approaching the coastline by water, you can easily imagine earlier times when the island was blanketed with intact forests,” said Ian Illuminato, AFA Campaigner. “While its remote location has allowed Vernon Bay to remain largely intact for now, this area and others like it could be lost unless the BC government immediately commits funding to support the development of Indigenous Protected Areas through First Nations land use planning initiatives, which first requires logging deferrals,” said Illuminato.
“Recent studies have shown that old-growth forests are worth far more standing than logged, in terms of economics and in terms of climate change. Considering the catastrophic impacts of climate change felt throughout BC this year, it’s hard to imagine why we would choose to continue eliminating one of our best defenses against drought, floods, and fires through destructive old-growth clearcutting.”
TJ Watt Featured in CBC’s Podcast, The Doc Project: Big Tree Hunt
/in News CoverageWe’re excited to share that AFA photographer TJ Watt was featured in CBC’s podcast, The Doc Project: Big Tree Hunt, which highlights his efforts to explore, document, and protect ancient forests in B.C.
Read the article at the link or below: https://www.cbc.ca/radio/docproject/photographer-of-giant-old-growth-trees-has-best-and-worst-job-in-the-world-1.6251373
And listen to the podcast documentary: https://www.cbc.ca/listen/live-radio/1-115/clip/15880467
Tune in to hear more about TJ’s photography and conservation work and join a remote bushwhacking mission to Vernon Bay in Barkley Sound in the territory of the Uchucklesaht and Tseshaht First Nations, where they explore the area’s incredible-yet-unprotected ancient forests and find monumental redcedar trees up to 12 feet in diameter at risk of being logged.
Photographer of giant old-growth trees has ‘best and worst job in the world’
CBC Radio
November 26, 2021
TJ Watt’s before-and-after shots in clearcut forests part of renewed movement to protect B.C.’s oldest trees.
On an overcast day last August, TJ Watt made his way around the trunk of a giant western red cedar. In one hand, he clutched a yellow measuring tape. With his other, he pushed away a thick undergrowth of salal and ferns.
“It’s a small hike just to get around this thing,” Watt called out. A moment later, he read the measurement of the tree’s girth: a whopping 11.6 metres.
It was the biggest tree that Watt had found all day. To get here, he had hiked several hours off-trail, bushwhacking through dense, moss-laden rainforest, near Barkley Sound on Vancouver Island’s rugged west coast.
An aerial view of unprotected old-growth forests along the coastline of Barkley Sound in the territory of the Uchucklesaht and Tseshaht First Nations. (TJ Watt)
The Victoria-based photographer and activist has spent much of the past 15 years searching for and photographing some of Canada’s biggest, oldest trees. The trees he finds are often upwards of a thousand years old and wide enough to drive a car through.
His backcountry quests are more than just adventures though. Most of the trees that Watt finds are slated to be cut down. Watt’s photographs, which he posts on social media, have become a powerful tool for ramping up public support to protect B.C.’s old-growth forests.
“It can be hard to capture the complexity and the whole essence of this issue,” says Watt, who co-founded the non-profit advocacy group Ancient Forest Alliance 10 years ago. “You have to somehow find a single image that encapsulates all of that, and the feelings that go with it.”
Old-growth logging has long been contentious in B.C. The debate first made headlines in the early 1990s, when hundreds of protesters gathered near Clayoquot Sound for the so-called “war in the woods.”
The protests garnered international media attention and shone a spotlight on logging practices in the province. Clayoquot Sound was ultimately protected and local First Nations have stewarded the area’s forests ever since. But elsewhere in B.C., old-growth logging continued.
In the last fiscal year, the province said $1.3 billion in revenue and more than 50,000 jobs were linked to the forestry sector. Logging is particularly important for some smaller, more remote communities, says Jim Girvan, a forestry economist and former director of the Truck Loggers Association. “If the forest industry wasn’t there operating, those small towns would eventually become ghost towns,” Girvan said.
An old-growth tree is defined in B.C. as one that is older than 250 years in coastal forests, or 140 years in interior forests. According to provincial data, roughly 50,000 hectares of old-growth forest are cut annually. The older, bigger trees tend to have the highest value, says Girvan, which is important for an industry that’s been struggling to keep afloat. “Old-growth logs, for example, are very good for making guitars, and that’s one of the products that a lot of people come to British Columbia for,” he explained.
For his part, Watt says he’s not opposed to logging but argues that it needs to be done differently — for example, in second-growth tree plantations, which replace old-growth forests lost to fire and logging, with trees re-logged every 50-60 years. Watt also feels “there should be a more value-added side to the industry.” Rather than exporting raw logs to other countries, Watt says, those logs should be processed in B.C. to make higher-end products.
Watt’s photographs have also led to a different economic opportunity: tourism. A stand of thousand-year old conifers near Port Renfrew, known as Avatar Grove, was protected after Watt’s photos caught the attention of hikers, ecologists and activists 10 years ago. Today, the area is a protected park and draws thousands of tourists every summer seeking big trees.
Still, many of the trees that Watt has photographed have been cut down. Last year, he hiked into the Caycuse Valley, a few hours north of Victoria, just as logging was set to begin. He decided to try something different: photographing the forest before—and after—it was cleared. “I remember thinking that by tomorrow morning [these trees] won’t be here,” he said. “It’s a very odd experience to feel that you’re essentially taking a portrait of something in its final days.”
Watt returned after logging was complete and took photos from the same vantage points. Then he posted the before-and-after series on social media. The response was almost immediate, he says. “When you refresh the page just a few minutes later and it’s already got a hundred comments and a thousand shares, you can tell that it’s going to blow up in a big way.”
The photos generated some two million views on social media, along with international media coverage, and sparked public outcry. Since then, tensions over old-growth logging have reached a boiling point with more than 900 protesters arrested at anti-logging blockades in the Fairy Creek watershed—not far from the Caycuse Valley where Watt took the before-and-after photos.
In early November—facing increasing public pressure—the B.C. government announced, in principle, a temporary halt to logging in 2.6 million hectares of old-growth forests. The province stated its “intention to work in partnership with First Nations” to develop forest sustainability plans while logging of certain rare old-growth trees is deferred. If the deferrals become permanent, the province estimates that up to 4,500 jobs could be lost. Industry officials have suggested that number could be four times higher.
The announcement came a year and a half after the provincially commissioned old-growth strategy review panel released its recommendations, calling for a “paradigm shift” in logging practices. The panel called for a more ecological approach to managing B.C.’s forests, and a stronger oversight role for First Nations.
“The small communities and logging contractors we spoke with were just as concerned about not losing biological diversity, not damaging our environment, as the people who are protesting out the windows,” said Al Gorley, co-chair of the old-growth review panel.
The provincial announcement came as welcome news for Watt. The giant western red cedar that he’d photographed near Barkley Sound this summer is located in one of the logging deferral areas, meaning it won’t be cut down any time soon.
After more than a decade of documenting trees before they’re cut down, Watt sounded cautiously optimistic. “At the end of the day, I need to know that I did everything I could to make a difference,” he said. “Hopefully our efforts pay off.”
“I think for someone who loves trees,” he added, “I have the best job and the worst job in the world.”
Notes From the Field: Powell River Trip
/in Notes From The FieldIn September 2021, Ancient Forest Alliance visited the city of Powell River to explore the region’s remaining old-growth forests, and meet with local community members and the Tla’amin First Nation to hear their views on the conservation of old-growth forests in the region. We experienced awe-inspiring landscapes, stunning ancient rainforests, and fascinating perspectives on old-growth conservation.
The area around Powell River has been stewarded since time immemorial by the Tla’amin and shíshálh First Nations. Since its founding, the town of Powell River has been deeply defined by the forest industry. Its valleys of monumental forests were easily accessible, and industrial logging has been ongoing in the region since the 19th century. Long dominated by its huge pulp mill, Powell River is a growing destination for ecotourism.
I (Ian Thomas) and TJ Watt were invited by the local qathet Old-Growth group to highlight some of the remaining old-growth forests in the Powell River region. We were joined by filmmaker Robin Munshaw to film a second community spotlight video about old-growth conservation in this magnificent area. We were generously hosted by local advocate Rachel Sherstad, who invited us to stay at her beautiful organic farm just outside the city of Powell River.
Massive granite walls, popular with local rock climbers, tower thousands of feet into the air in the Eldred Valley.
The towering granite walls of the Eldred River Valley.
Mt. Freda
On the first day, we went up Mt. Freda with Erik Blaney. Erik is a member of the Tla’amin First Nation and has been a strong voice for old-growth conservation in his territory. Recently, the Tla’amin requested that Western Forest Products pause all old-growth logging in their territory. One of their paused cutblocks on Mt. Freda is 21 hectares (52 acres) in size and is located at over 1,100 metres (3,609 feet) above sea level. The steep, winding road that snaked up the mountain to this paused cutblock was a powerful reminder of the extreme lengths that logging companies are going to in order to carve out the last vestiges of old-growth forest from the landscape. Stands of sub-alpine rainforests like these represent the most ancient forests known in Canada. Members of the qathet Old-Growth group found that some of the trees logged on Mt. Freda were over 1,200 years old. If these trees were artifacts or buildings, they would be treasured in museums or protected by law; but in 21st century Canada, it’s completely legal to blast a road through sensitive mountain wetlands, cut down a tree well into its second millennium, and leave behind a stump field where an ancient forest once stood. It is hard to find the words to capture the antiquity of these forests when the trees themselves are older than the English language as we know it.
Erik Blaney of the Tla’amin First Nation between two ancient yellow cedars on Mt. Freda.
During our interview with Erik, we learned that, twenty years ago, when the Tla’amin nation was seeking a tree from which to carve a traditional ocean-going canoe, they searched their vast territory and could only find six suitable trees. Out of the thousands of usable old-growth trees that would have been present a century ago, only six remained.
A giant old-growth yellow cedar within an approved cutblock, now temporarily deferred
After interviewing Erik, we explored the still-standing portion of the approved cutblock. We found giant yellow cedars, likely over a thousand years old, towering over slopes that glowed with blue-green blueberry shrubs. The soft forest floor was braided by little creeks meandering through mossy beds, filling the woods with constant music of falling water. Few forests anywhere have such a sense of timeless peace as these primeval sub-alpine groves. Nearby, picturesque alpine tarns were glowing with soft reds and golds as Autumn began its slow creep down the mountainside. High in the mountains and locked in by snow for much of the year, these forests are incredibly slow-growing, delicate ecosystems. For this reason, it’s more accurate to call the clearcutting of them a form of “tree-mining” rather than forestry, as it will be many generations before such forests ever recover from the destructive clearcutting that is BC’s standard forestry practice.
It’s sobering to think that without the leadership and initiative of Erik Blaney and the Tla’amin First Nation, this timeless forest we were exploring would’ve been completely erased. Without any action by the provincial government to help transition communities away from old-growth logging, this site could still be logged. Erik explained the economic challenges that the Tla’amin nation faces in protecting their remnant stands of valuable, ancient trees. Erik emphasized that he believes vast tribal parks are necessary to protect Tla’amin culture and that the province of British Columbia needs to provide significant funds to realize that goal.
Eldred Valley
The next day we headed to the Eldred Valley. This majestic valley is revered among rock climbers across Canada for its magnificent battlements of towering granite. We were joined in our exploration by Dr. Andrew Bryant, an ecologist with a lifetime of experience researching wildlife in coastal British Columbia. The lion’s share of Andrew’s work has been in saving the endangered Vancouver Island marmot from extinction. He has also done research on the old-growth-dependent marbled murrelet and led pioneering work on how forest-dwelling birds respond to different methods of logging. His decades of experience studying coastal ecology provided a fascinating perspective on the ecological importance of old-growth forests.
On our way into the Eldred, we stopped at Goat Mountain. Andrew told us that in the fall, the local natural history club comes to this spot to watch mountain goats foraging on the sheer cliffs. Though iconically associated with the treeless expanses of ice and rock that dominate the forbidding peaks of British Columbia’s mountains, this monarch of the alpine realm is actually dependent on the rainforest for its survival. The Coast Mountains experience extreme winter snowfall, and mountain goats here must retreat to forested winter ranges to access the forage that will keep them alive through the winter. The BC government’s own conservation plan for mountain goats identifies the loss of old-growth forests as a key threat to their survival. The mountain goat then is a crucial reminder of the way in which old-growth forests sustain a huge variety of creatures that seem only tenuously connected to them: from coho salmon deep in the Pacific Ocean to a mountain goat perched high on a granite slab
default
As we entered the Eldred and saw on all sides its soaring granite walls, we immediately understood the reason for its legendary status in the climbing community. There was an indescribable majesty in watching the clouds drift through the valley; the peaks looked like huge islands washed by foaming surf, and we were mesmerized by the always-shifting pageantry of cloud and stone, broken by sudden windows of dazzling sunlight. Contrasting with the primeval wildness of these monumental stone faces was the heavily exploited forest of the valley. It was like the entire valley floor had been gouged with an enormous ice cream scoop, with the only remaining old-growth forests hanging on in tenacious little slivers of dark green on the very fringes of sheer rock. Despite driving for over three hours up the Eldred on rough logging roads, we still couldn’t reach any accessible old-growth to showcase in our interview with Andrew. Eventually, we settled in front of the castle-like stump of what had once been an ancient redcedar and listened to Andrew explain the critical ecological importance of ancient forests.
After interviewing Andrew, we were determined to see any scrap of remaining old-growth that we could, so we set out in search of the shreds of old-growth still clinging to the upper walls of the Eldred. We hiked up through a gloomy second-growth forest where the closed canopy of young trees blocks out the necessary light for understory dwelling shrubs and forbs. Such barren forests are deserts to foraging deer and for the wolves and cougars that depend on them. We had driven three hours deep into the Eldred and, though we hiked further and further up, we still couldn’t find a single old-growth tree. As we climbed higher, the ground fell away on all sides until we were walking a narrow ridge, only wide enough for us to continue in single file. This slender bridge led directly into a remnant stand of ancient forest
Conservation Biologist Andrew Bryant beside a massive cedar stump amongst second-growth in the Eldred Valley.
Dr. Andrew Bryant beside a giant cedar stump in second-growth.
Unprotected monumental redcedars can still be found at the base of of some of the climbing walls in the valley.
The moment we set foot in the old-growth grove, we passed through a threshold into another world. After the dark, lifeless gloom of the logged-over second-growth, suddenly there was light and green and life. We’ve had the privilege to explore many ancient groves in BC, and still, we were stunned by the beauty we’d stumbled into. The glade was split by a stream of clear water overhung with devil’s club, blueberry, and sword fern. The forest floor was a gently sloping garden of oak fern and queen’s cup. Rising above it all, were the magnificent trunks of enormous redcedars; ancient monarchs still ruling this quiet glade as they had for centuries. As we wandered through this garden of giants, we found the daybeds of animals nestled among the roots of the colossal cedars, and on their bark, the claw marks of bears. This grove was clearly a precious oasis for the wildlife of the region. We could easily imagine them creeping up, just like we had, through the vast wasteland of second-growth forest, so they could rest or feed in this far-flung refuge, nestled against the granite teeth of the Eldred.
From this vantage point, we could see the popular climbing wall of Amon Rudh and its dark green beard of remaining old-growth. Amon Rudh is named after a mountain in J.R.R. Tolkien’s world of Middle Earth. In Tolkien’s legendarium, this mountain is the refuge of the doomed hero Turin, who takes shelter there from the conquering forces of Tolkien’s primeval dark lord. Tolkien was a pioneer in the way he linked the traditional struggles of good and evil – expected from fantasy – with vivid imagery of ecological devastation. It’s not lost on anyone who knows the story of Amon Rudh, a symbol of heroic resistance to the forces of destruction, that the Eldred’s Amon Rudh holds some of the last remnants of healthy forest in a valley nearly conquered by clearcut logging. In recent years, the local climbing community of Powell River has been actively opposing plans to clearcut this last, tiny trace of the Eldred’s ancient rainforests.
Local advocate and qathet Old-Growth member, Jill Marie Bronson.
On our third day, we interviewed Jill Marie Bronson, one of the founders of the qathet Old-Growth group. She’s been doing fantastic work documenting and advocating for old-growth forests in the Powell River region. Jill Marie defies the stereotype of your average old-growth forest advocate. Deeply connected to BC’s logging industry, Jill Marie’s father works as a tree-faller and she herself has worked in laying out cutblocks. Educated in forestry, Jill Marie provided a fascinating and insightful perspective on the old-growth forest issues in the region.
That afternoon, we headed out of Powell River, reflecting on our fascinating three-day adventure. We interviewed people with diverse perspectives on biology, forestry, economics, and First Nations culture. Yet, despite these varied backgrounds, the consensus was clear: things need to change. The Powell River region is a perfect microcosm of the issues facing First Nations and forestry communities across British Columbia. How can they transition away from old-growth logging? Despite a history deeply steeped in forestry, community members from all different backgrounds are increasingly sounding the alarm on the destruction and unsustainable future of old-growth logging. They’re asking for leadership and financial support from a provincial government that still seems unwilling to act.
New community spotlight video: Mt. Freda & Eldred Valley
/in VideoWatch our new community spotlight video featuring the ancient forests of Mt. Freda and the Eldred Valley near the town of Powell River on the west coast of BC. The region, which is home to Canada’s oldest recorded trees, has been stewarded by the Tla’amin, shíshálh, Klahoose, and K’ómoks, First Nations since time immemorial.
Photos: Eldred River Valley
/in Photo GalleryLocated in Tla’amin First Nation territory, outside the town of Powell River, the Eldred Valley is legendary among rock climbers for its towering granite peaks while also supporting some of the last vestiges of old-growth forest in the region. These magnificent groves are home to monumental western redcedars and Douglas-firs, and provide critical habitat for wildlife in the valley.
Most recently, the BC government has identified a number of at-risk ancient groves in the Eldred Valley for potential logging deferrals, including some of the forest pictured here. Significant funding for First Nations is now urgently needed to make these deferrals possible.
Photo Gallery: https://staging.ancientforestalliance.org/photos-media/eldred-river-valley/https://staging.ancientforestalliance.org/photos-media/eldred-river-valley/
Send a (NEW!) instant message to the BC government to demand funding for conservation solutions here: https://staging.ancientforestalliance.org/funding-send-a-message/
Photos: Mount Freda Ancient Forests – qathet Region
/in Photo GalleryLocated in the territory of the Tla’amin and shíshálh First Nations, and close to the town of Powell River, Mt. Freda is home to some of the oldest trees in Canada.
Photo Gallery: https://staging.ancientforestalliance.org/photos-media/mt-freda-ancient-forests/
Currently, the logging of the remaining ancient forests of Mt. Freda has paused thanks to the leadership and initiative of the Tla’amin First Nation who requested a temporary halt to any old-growth logging in their territory. Most recently, the BC government has identified a number of at-risk ancient groves on Mt. Freda for potential logging deferrals, including some of the forest pictured here.
Send a (NEW!) instant message to the BC government, demanding they must step up and commit at least $300 million dollars in provincial funding to support Indigenous Protected Areas to permanently protect old-growth forests and sustainable economic alternatives for First Nations communities across BC: https://staging.ancientforestalliance.org/funding-send-a-message/
Photographer TJ Watt wins accolades for showing the world the destruction of old-growth forests in BC
/in News CoverageFocus on Victoria
November 12, 2021
Watt’s dramatic images of coastal forests—before and after logging—have helped everyone better understand what’s being lost.
THERE WERE A FEW TIMES, as TJ Watt slogged through a sea of stumps and barren clearcuts, that he questioned whether anyone cared that trees, which had grown for centuries and supported intricate networks of species, had been destroyed forever.
“You sometimes wonder ‘why am I even doing this? Is it really making a difference,’” said Watt, a photographer and campaigner for the Ancient Forest Alliance whose dramatic before-and-after pictures of old-growth logging in BC recently went viral.
International shockwaves from his photographs of giant western red cedars in the Caycuse River watershed on southern Vancouver Island, strategically placed with after-logging images of massive stumps, helped focus attention on BC’s already controversial old-growth logging policies.
The reaction proved that, indeed, people do care.
“It says we are on the right track,” Watt said.
The images appeared in several major magazines and were recognized in three international photo competitions. Then, in October, Watt was named as a National Geographic Explorer and Royal Canadian Geographical Society Explorer.
Watt will also receive a Trebek Initiative grant, which will help fund more expeditions into remote areas where, out of sight of the general public, old-growth is being logged.
He hopes the recognition will allow him to reach a wider audience. “I think it just goes to show that this is truly a globally significant issue. These are some of the Earth’s largest and oldest trees and, here we are in a first-world country, and it is still legal to cut them down,” said Watt.
The Trebek Initiative is named after Alex Trebek, the Canadian host of the popular television show Jeopardy, who died earlier this year. Trebek was an honorary president of the Royal Canadian Geographical Society and the grants, awarded for the first time this year, support explorers, scientists, photographers, geographers and educators who use storytelling to ignite “a passion to preserve.”
The recognition comes shortly after Watt’s latest release of photographs that are breath-taking for all the wrong reasons.
The pictures of scalped hillsides along the upper Mahatta River on northwestern Vancouver Island immediately drew horrified condemnation of BC’s old-growth forestry policies.
About 50 hectares around the Mahatta River, within the territory of Quatsino First Nation, was auctioned off by BC Timber Sales, and the photos show the raw reality of clearcutting, with slopes and the valley bottom denuded of old-growth trees, leaving only giant cedar stumps.
“[The photos] really struck a nerve with people. A lot of people see those images and think ‘didn’t we stop clearcutting like that back in the 1990s?’” Watt said.
The trees were cut last year and this year—after the Province received the Old Growth Strategic Review which called for a paradigm shift in the way BC manages ancient forests.
“This is one of the most atrocious examples of logging that I’ve seen in more than a decade,” said Watt, 37, who has worked on photography projects for the Ancient Forest Alliance since 2010.
The Province has committed to implementing the panel’s 14 recommendations, but, in the meantime, old-growth logging has accelerated and Forests Minister Katrine Conroy confirmed last month that, out of a total annual cut of about 200,000 hectares, 55,000 hectares are old growth.
Historically, before commercial logging, there were about 25-million hectares of old growth and government figures now put BC’s total forest at 56.2 million hectares of which 11.1 million hectares is old growth (not the 13.7-million hectares that government previously estimated).
The definition of coastal old growth is a forest with trees that are at least 250 years old and, in the Interior, trees that are at least 140 years old.
It’s too late for the Mahatta River forest, but Watt is holding out hope that people will no longer put up with such destruction elsewhere.
“The world is watching right now,” he said
“I’m hoping that the pressure of these images and the rest of the photographs we have been sharing are enough to push the government in the direction of doing the right thing.”
From skate-boarding hippie to making a difference with pictures
Watt’s interest in photography, which morphed into his crusade for old growth, started when he was a skate-boarding teenager, sporting dreadlocks and living in Metchosin.
“Like every young photographer, I figured I wanted to travel the world and shoot photos of far-flung places, but after a few months doing that and then coming home I realized the landscape in the forests right in my own back yard on Vancouver Island, are second to none and I decided to really focus my efforts here,” he said.
That commitment was cemented by a stint at the now-defunct Western Academy of Photography.
“It gave me a year to focus specifically on photography instead of doing all the construction and landscaping jobs I was doing. I knew I wanted to do photography related to nature and photography with a real purpose,” he said.
It was a decision that worried his family, Watt admits.
“If you tell your parents that you’re going to be an artist that saves trees and that’s how you’re going to make a living, they definitely roll their eyes at you and look concerned and worried,” he said.
“But, I can say, more than a decade later, they’re some of the proudest people around. You sometimes really do have to follow your gut, follow your dreams and believe it’s all going to work out.”
Andrea Kucherawy was program manager at the Western Academy of Photogaphy when Watt arrived as a student and she watched his potential develop.
“He definitely stood out for me,” said Kucherawy who has avidly followed his career.
Watt’s interest in environmental photography paralleled his interest in sports such as skateboarding, said Kucherawy, who is pleased he took the environmental route.
“I honestly don’t think we would be where we are now without the work he has done,” she said.
“People need a visual, a comparison and his before-and-after work often includes a human element to give a sense of scale and I think that’s what’s really empowering for the cause,” she said.
Ken Wu, who co-founded the Ancient Forest Alliance and is now executive director of the Endangered Ecosystems Alliance, first met Watt when he (Wu) was executive director of the Victoria chapter of the Wilderness Committee.
“He was this skateboarding hippie who always had a camera with him and he liked to take pictures of all the protests we were organizing,” Wu said.
“Then I sent him into the woods to take pictures of the old-growth forests and to build trails and it turned out that he had a great aptitude for trail building and outdoor activities in rugged landscapes,” he said.
When Wu split from the Wilderness Committee, one of his first moves was to hire TJ as the Ancient Forest Alliance’s first staff member.
One of the most celebrated early campaigns was sparked by the duo’s discovery of Avatar Grove, near Port Renfrew. TJ’s photos of the huge, gnarly trees and untouched forest, which was slated to be felled, sparked massive public interest.
Avatar Grove has now become a tourist attraction and was pivotal in the transformation of Port Renfrew from a logging town to a destination for people who want to see big trees.
It was the right time in history, noted Wu: the movie Avatar—which has a story line about saving a forest on another planet—was taking the world by storm; and TJ’s growing camera skills, combined with the rise of Facebook, allowed his photos of the discovery of a spectacular grove of trees in an accessible area to be shared around the world.
“I recognized that TJ’s photos could be news media in and of themselves because they could be shared on that new platform,” Wu said.
“They really hit home. It’s a visual shock. It’s like harpooned whales or rhinos with their horns cut off, you get it a lot more quickly than all of my emails about productivity distinctions and tenure regulations,” he said.
Edward Burtynsky, one of Canada’s best-known photographers, who focuses on global industrial landscapes, came across TJ when he was looking at photographing big trees and BC’s northern rainforest.
All his research led to TJ and a loose collaboration started, said Burtynsky, who was impressed with the power of the photographs and the direction of the Ancient Forest Alliance campaigns.
“When you name an area and name a tree it’s a really powerful way to save them,” he said.
Now, in the age of iPhones, images have become one of the most powerful and fluid forms of communication, putting eyes on parts of the world that most people cannot witness first-hand, Burtynsky said.
“Those before-and-after images I believe really drive the point home. You look at a tree that is 500, 700 or even 1,000 years old that sprouted before the medieval age and is now going to be sent somewhere else—not even here—to be cut into boards for decking. There’s something terribly wrong with that image,” he said.
“I can’t see a more compelling way to tell that story than letting people look at that majestic tree and then [look at it again] after the loggers have been in.”
Sonia Furstenau, leader of the BC Green Party, said Watt’s photographs illustrate the gap between logging practices on the ground and the story that government tries to tell.
“Thirty years ago, the world was paying attention because we were clearcutting old-growth forests. Well, nothing has changed,” she said.
“We have accepted this approach to forestry that puts mechanization and efficiency above, not only ecosystem protection, but also above jobs,” said Furstenau, pointing out that increasing volumes of timber are being cut with fewer and fewer people working in the industry.
“When you see these images that TJ has so beautifully captured of before and after, what he shows is the real devastation of these logging practices,” Furstenau said.
A huge emotional toll in witnessing the destruction
The accolades for Watt come at a pivotal point as the provincial government announced in early November that logging will be deferred on 2.6 million hectares of old growth for two years while it consults with the province’s 204 First Nations.
The deferrals are based on new mapping, identifying areas of old growth where there is imminent risk of biodiversity loss. BC Timber Sales, the government agency that hands out logging contracts for 20 percent of the province’s annual allowable cut—and which has been heavily criticized for auctioning off some of the most controversial areas of old growth—will immediately stop advertising and selling parcels in the deferral areas.
It is positive that government is now using independent mapping, based on science, to identify old-growth forests at risk and that mapping confirms that many of BC’s forests are at risk of irreversible biodiversity loss, Watt said.
However, details and provincial funding are missing although the federal government has committed $50-million to help protect BC’s ancient forests, noted Watt.
“Without a matching provincial commitment of several hundred million dollars in conservation funding, with a primary focus on First Nations economic relief linked to deferrals, the full scale of the deferrals and eventual permanent protection will be impossible to achieve,” he said.
“We have the road map in hand, but we’re missing the gas in the tank,” he said.
That means the clock is ticking as the ever-shrinking remains of BC’s old-growth forests are continuing to fall and Watt suspects it will be impossible to avoid more before-and-after pictures—and they are never easy.
The chance to inform the public about forestry practices in the hidden corners of the province is a privilege, but it leaves scars, Watt admits.
“There’s a huge emotional toll and compounding ecological grief to witnessing the disappearance and destruction of these truly irreplaceable forests,” he said.
“It even causes a lot of anger, because I know that every day there’s a delay in ensuring these forests are protected, some of them are gone forever. Trees may come back, but never the ancient forests that are so humbling and awe-inspiring.”
As an example, he described how retracing his steps through the Caycuse after the machines had done their worst, was like looking at the death of old friends.
The idea of irretrievable loss when old-growth forests are cut was echoed by Gary Merkel, one of the authors of the Old Growth Strategic Review and a member of the technical advisory panel on the recent deferrals.
Speaking at the news conference Merkel emphasized the importance of the underlying ecosystems in old-growth forests: “Some of our ecosystems in British Columbia remain relatively undisturbed since the last ice-age, more than 10,000 years,” he said.
“We can grow new trees, they are renewable. These ecosystems, in most cases, are not renewable. They will never come back in a lifetime and possibly ever because of climate change,” he said.
Watt’s photographs have helped make British Columbians aware of what was happening in the remote reaches of Vancouver Island. Despite the toll, Watt is committed to continuing his work on behalf of the forest: “Unless we go on these trips to try to expose them, the forests would disappear without anybody knowing about it.”
Read the original article