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The Tyee: BC ‘Going Backwards’ on Ecosystem Protections
Advocates, the BC Greens, and a former cabinet minister take aim at the NDP’s stalled efforts to protect ecosystems, such as old-growth forests.

The Tyee: BC Must Stop Blaming First Nations for Old-Growth Logging
BC is increasing logging while lagging on old-growth protection. Experts say the province should fund First Nations to conserve forests instead.

Western Coralroot
Meet one of the rainforest’s loveliest yet strangest flowers: the western coralroot!
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Wednesday, Dec. 10th 5-7pm: AFA Year End "Meet and Greet" and Open House in Victoria!
/in AnnouncementsWednesday, December 10th
5:00 to 7:00 pm
The Dock, 3rd floor (accessed via elevator in the little courtyard), by Fan Tan Alley off Pandora Street, Victoria
Invite friends and family on Facebook at: https://www.facebook.com/events/371190086382882/
**Drinks! Appetizers! Socialize! Slideshow! AFA Holiday Season Products!**
Dear AFA Supporter,
What a year we've had! There have been great things to celebrate and there are big plans for the future, which we hope to share with you at our year end meet & greet, slideshow and open house.
Held at our new shared office space, The Dock, it will be a warm and cozy evening where you can meet most of the AFA team and many fellow supporters like yourself, and have a sneak peak into the behind the scenes of the AFA. There will be light snacks and drinks, plus two slideshow showings, one from 5:30 – 5:45 pm, and another from 6:20 – 6:35 pm, where Ken Wu and TJ Watt will share stories and images from this past year, and give you some insight into the year to come. Also, enjoy hundreds of TJ Watt's NEW ancient forest images from 2014 – most of which we haven't had a chance to share yet – which will be on a revolving slideshow throughout the night. We will have a letter-writing station if you want to express your concerns to our elected representatives about our magnificent forests as well.
The event will be held next Wednesday evening, December 10th, from 5:00 – 7:00 pm at our shared office, The Dock (3rd floor, by Fan Tan Alley off Pandora Street, accessed by the elevator in the little courtyard). Come say hi and enjoy some happy company and tasty treats! We will also have our cards, calendars, shirts, and certificates available to purchase as conscious gifts for this holiday season.
We look forward to sharing our night with you!
~ The Ancient Forest Alliance Team
Joan, Jackie, Amanda, TJ, Sandi, Ken, Hannah, Kevin
Watershed action urgent: Fraser
/in News Coverage“The time to act is now” was the message delivered by outgoing Shawnigan Lake director Bruce Fraser on protecting the Alberni Valley’s watershed.
Bruce delivered that message to a packed Search and Rescue Hall that included local residents, Island Timberlands representatives and city officials during a watershed forum organized by the Watershed-Forest Alliance and Alberni-Pacific Rim MLA Scott Fraser.
Bruce Fraser said that the concerns he’s heard voiced in the Alberni Valley about watershed protection are similar to the worries people are having all around the province, as well as the issues he dealt with in Shawnigan Lake.
“Shawnigan is feeling that human footprint, everything from climate change to gravel beds,” said Bruce, comparing the situation there to the Alberni Valley’s, both in terms of industry encroaching on the watershed and the provincial government’s seeming lack of initiative in terms of dealing with any problems that may arise.
“Our senior governments have basically retreated from the fields in so many cases, leaving us with a damaged environment and too little control to do anything about it,” said Bruce, adding that public support was key to getting a say in watershed planning.
However, Bruce said that Port Alberni is in a better place to take action with its watershed than was Shawnigan Lake, which is an unincorporated electoral area with no municipal council.
“We had to create local civic infrastructure [in Shawnigan Lake] to try to gain some authority to be involved in watershed planning,” he said. “Here you already have a council and you are a municipality, you don’t have to reinvent that.”
Having the civic authority in place means that “city council will have to step up to continue to put pressure on the various interests” in the area, said Bruce.
The recently passed Water Sustainability Act will be key to gaining control of the watershed.
“It has a clause in it that enables local governments to become involved in some of the responsibilities for watershed planning.”
While the details aren’t yet hammered out and regulations won’t be written until 2015, Bruce said that this is the ideal time for Port Alberni to position itself to be a part of the dialogue.
“City council should be having a dialogue with government about their role under the Water Sustainability Act and they should do so as soon as possible.”
That’s the sort of action Scott Fraser is hoping for from Port Alberni’s new city council, some of whom were in attendance at the forum.
Scott said he was frustrated by the lack of action he’s seen from the province. He cited correspondence between Minister of Forests, Lands and Natural Resources Steve Thomson and environmental experts that stated that areas currently being logged in the China Creek watershed by Island Timberlands should not be logged as something that should have spurred the province into action, rather than being ignored.
“I need support from local government, from the regional district, from the city of Port Alberni,” Scott said, adding that on his own, he doesn’t have enough clout.
“We still have a chance to have some control over what happens in our region. The local government has that responsibility and I think we’re going to see this local government take that seriously.”
Until local governments pressure the provincial government into taking action, there’s not much that can be done.
“Private land is private land, you can do pretty much what you want with it,” said Scott.
A love of big trees rewarded
/in News CoverageDr. Al Carder was recently awarded the 2014 Forest Sustainability Award from the Ancient Forest Alliance for his decades of service to document, research and promote the conservation of old-growth trees in British Columbia.
The 104-year-old Carder is considered the oldest forest conservationist in the province. His relationship with giant trees began in 1917, when he was seven and he helped his father measure a tall tree near their home in the lower Fraser Valley. He went on to become Canada’s first agrometeorologist after earning a doctorate in plant ecology.
In his retirement, he and his wife, Mary, set off on a “World Big Tree Hunt,” with Mary often being used as human scale next to giant trees in photographs he took of his finds. His work was published in two books: Forest Giants of the World, Past and Present (1995) and Giant Trees of North America and the World (2005).
“Al Carder was researching and raising awareness about B.C.’s biggest trees years before old-growth forests became an issue of popular concern in this province,” said Ken Wu, Ancient Forest Alliance executive director. “His work decades ago on the most iconic parts of our old-growth forests, their unbelievably huge trees, helped to lay the foundation of public awareness that fostered the rise of the subsequent ancient-forest movement.”
Carder’s children, Judith, Mary-Clare and Andrew, accepted the award on behalf of their father, who is currently ill with pneumonia.
Along with his books, Carder is perhaps best known for his work to highlight the Red Creek Fir, the world’s largest known Douglas-fir tree, located in the San Juan Valley near Port Renfrew. Since then, the town has become known as the Tall Trees Capital of Canada, with tourists from around the world coming to visit the Red Creek Fir, nearby Avatar Grove and the Walbran and Carmanah valleys.
The Ancient Forest Alliance is a B.C.-based conservation group working to protect endangered old-growth forests and to ensure a sustainable, second-growth forest industry. For more information, go to ancientforestalliance.org.
Read more: https://www.timescolonist.com/our-community-a-love-of-big-trees-rewarded-1.1653607