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It’s AFA’s 16th Birthday!
On Tuesday, February 24th, we’re celebrating 16 years of working together with you, our community, to ensure the permanent protection of old-growth forests in BC. To mark the date, will you chip in $16 or more to support our work?

Budget 2026 Shortchanges Nature Protection and Sustainable Forestry Transition At a Critical Time for British Columbia
BC’s Budget 2026 fails to provide the funding needed to secure lasting protection for endangered ecosystems and at-risk old-growth forests in the province.

Welcome, Zeinab, our new Vancouver Canvass Director!
We're excited to welcome Zeinab Salenhiankia, our new Vancouver Canvass Director, to the Ancient Forest Alliance team!
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Coastal town replaces logging with tourism
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PORT RENFREW — Rosie Betsworth and TJ Watt readily admit the irony of their relationship and acknowledge it is raising eyebrows among old-timers in Port Renfrew.
But, recognizing the old saying that necessity makes strange bedfellows, Betsworth, president of Port Renfrew Chamber of Commerce, believes the liaison with the Ancient Forest Alliance is positive for everyone mapping a new future for the former logging town.
“We used to depend on logging to sustain Port Renfrew. Now the tables have turned and we’re looking at the tall trees as our future,” said Betsworth as the two groups cemented their partnership Thursday with the opening of a new tourist information centre, where visitors can pick up a map of the area’s massive old-growth trees.
“Some of the older folks from the logging industry have other opinions and that’s fair. This community did survive by logging in the past, but they have to understand this is a new world. This will sustain our town,” Betsworth said.
The Chamber would never ally itself with a radical environmental group, but the AFA educates people about the forest and benefits of protecting old growth, Betsworth said.
“Their approach is soft and it works,” she said.
International visitors have been coming to the tiny west coast community of 270 people since news spread about a stand of massive trees dubbed Avatar Grove.
The Red Creek fir, the world’s largest Douglas fir, and San Juan spruce, Canada’s largest Sitka spruce are also in the area.
The AFA takes monthly tours to Avatar Grove, with between 30 and 80 people on each tour and vehicles are parked daily on the remote logging road as tourists struggle into the unforgiving old-growth terrain to look at gnarly giants.
Each of those visitors is likely to eat a meal or stay the night, Betsworth said.
“It’s a big economic driver.”
Watt, who has escorted thousands of visitors up and down the steep, slippery slopes of Avatar Grove, believes Port Renfrew’s future lies in nature.
“It has all the makings of an incredible destination — wildlife, rivers, lakes, beaches, big trees, fishing and surfing,” he said, looking at the “world’s gnarliest tree,” a red cedar, stretching up about 80 metres with a bulbous, three-metre burl and serpent-like roots.
Rough paths now run through the forest and pink tape indicates navigable routes through the green maze of rainforest, which produces giant mosquitoes as well as giant trees.
But much of the grove remains unprotected and the Teal-Jones Group has cutting rights.
“It would be such a smart choice to protect this area, such a great opportunity,” Watt said, musing about the public outcry if logging started in the grove.
The province is exploring protecting the whole stand through an old-growth management area, meaning no cutting would be allowed, and stakeholders are being consulted, Forests Ministry spokeswoman Vivian Thomas confirmed.
A section is already in an old-growth management area.
The prospect of an eco-tourism based economy, helped by the paving of the logging road from Port Renfrew to Lake Cowichan to form the Pacific Rim Circle Route, is taking root throughout the community.
Close to the tourist information centre, flatbed trucks are delivering pre-fabricated cabins to Three Point Properties’ Wild Coast Cottages development.
The 35 square-metre cottages, surrounded by innovative landscaping on 230 square-metre lots, sell for $129,000 to $159,000. Thirty-one out of 40 have sold since last June.
The second, waterfront phase, with 40 bigger, more expensive cottages, will be launched in a couple of weeks, said sales manager Nancy Paine.
“I have noticed the change in Port Renfrew in the last year,” she said.
“Lots of young people are becoming involved. It was once a forestry town — that’s why people lived here — and now it’s being promoted as the quintessential West Coast experience.”
A possible sign of Port Renfrew’s transformation is that the community now has what Betsworth describes as its first strip mall — four small businesses beside the West Coast Road.
There is still the weather factor, she acknowledged as a fine drizzle fell.
“But look how green everything is here. It’s a tradeoff. It’s a good lifestyle and you take the rain with the sun.”
Times Colonist article not currently available.
Ancient Forest Alliance and Port Renfrew Chamber of Commerce cooperate to Protect Old-Growth Forests and Avatar Grove through new Chamber Info Centre
/in Media ReleasePort Renfrew, BC – The Ancient Forest Alliance (AFA) is supporting the Port Renfrew Chamber of Commerce during the launch of a new visitor information centre that will help bolster tourism in the region as well as funnel thousands of visitors into the town’s surrounding ancient forests.
The info centre will play host to a media press conference today, Thursday, July 14 at 12:00 noon, followed by a tour of the nearby unprotected Avatar Grove. Port Renfrew Chamber President Rosie Betsworth and Ancient Forest Alliance campaigner and photographer TJ Watt will discuss their cooperative efforts to promote and protect the Avatar Grove and other nearby old-growth forests.
Since the locating of Avatar Grove on Crown lands near Port Renfrew by Watt in late 2009 and shortly afterwards its demarcation with survey tape for logging, “Avatar Grove Fever” has hit Port Renfrew, drawing in thousands of new visitors from far and wide who have come to the see the Grove’s gigantic, burl-covered redcedar trees and rare old-growth Douglas-firs. The Grove has also attracted national and international media including Al-Jazeera TV last March.
In the coming weeks the AFA will continue to pump up the number of visitors to Port Renfrew by telling thousands of its supporters to visit the new info centre and to spend their dollars in town to ensure that the financial benefits of old-growth forest recreation and their eventual protection are reflected in the local economy.
“This is a new, revolutionary approach to conservation for an environmental group to forge a cooperative relationship with a Chamber of Commerce and the small business community to protect the environment and bolster the local economy at the same time,” stated TJ Watt, Ancient Forest Alliance campaigner.
“Port Renfrew’s economy will greatly benefit from the promotion and protection of the Avatar Grove and local old-growth forests. We are positioned to attract tourists from across Canada, the US, Europe and elsewhere who will come to see some of the largest, most magnificent trees in the world here. Our new info center will be a central hub to direct tourists where to go once they arrive,” stated Rosie Betsworth, Chamber of Commerce president. “Our cooperation with the Ancient Forest Alliance has already resulted in thousands of new visitors to our town over the past year.”
In March of 2011 the AFA helped raise over $5,000 for the Port Renfrew Chamber to help cover staffing costs at the new centre. The fundraiser, held at the Sooke Harbour House, drew a crowd of mostly business owners from the Sooke and Port Renfrew region who recognize the economic and environmental benefits of promoting and protecting BC’s world renowned ancient forests.
Port Renfrew has bragging rights as the “big trees capital of Canada”. The world’s largest Douglas-fir tree, the Red Creek Fir, Canada’s largest Sitka spruce, the San Juan Spruce, and the giant, gnarly trees of the Avatar Grove all grow right on its door step. Just a couple of hours drive north grows Canada’s largest tree, the Cheewhat Giant. A “Tall Trees Tour” map of the Port Renfrew area which features photos, driving directions and background information is now available to hand out to tourists.
The Ancient Forest Alliance is calling on the BC government to protect BC’s endangered old-growth forests, ensure sustainable second-growth forestry, ban raw log exports, and assist in the retooling and development of second-growth mills and value-added facilities.
According to satellite photos, about 90% of the original, productive old-growth forests on Vancouver Island have been logged south of Barkley Sound, including about 96% of the valley bottoms where the largest trees grow. Only about 6% of the Island’s original, productive old-growth forests are protected in parks.
See “before” and “after” old-growth forest maps at: https://ancientforestalliance.org/ancient-forests/before-after-old-growth-maps/
See the Ancient Forest Alliance’s Youtube Clips of Port Renfrew’s (Canada’s) largest trees at:
– World’s Largest Douglas Fir – the Red Creek Fir: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XfBWLVj-Xjg
– Canada’s Largest Spruce – the San Juan Spruce: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Lql9_hWuFLA&NR=1
– Canada’s Gnarliest Tree – Save the Avatar Grove: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l_uPkAWsvVw
See spectacular photogalleries of the Avatar Grove and Canada’s largest trees at:
https://ancientforestalliance.org/photos-media/
CHEK TV News clip featuring Port Renfrew’s new Tourist Information Centre and the Avatar Grove
/in News Coverage, VideoTweet
The Ancient Forest Alliance along with the Port Renfrew Chamber of Commerce launched the new Tourist Information Centre today which will serve to funnel thousands of visitors into the town’s surrounding old-growth forests, raise awareness of the need to protect them, and help create a vibrant eco-tourism based economy.
Direct link to video: https://bcove.me/p0rti00i