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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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Massive Port Renfrew tree stumps raise logging suspicions
/in News CoverageMassive stumps found on Crown land near Port Renfrew are arousing fears that logging companies are taking the biggest and best old-growth trees even though the local chamber of commerce wants to promote giant tree tourism.
The old-growth red cedar stumps were cut recently and measure between 3.7 and 4.6 metres. They were found in the Gordon River Valley, near a huge stand of old-growth trees nicknamed Avatar Grove by members of the Ancient Forest Alliance.
“People need to understand the urgency of the situation,” said Ken Wu, Alliance co-founder.
“Most of our remaining old-growth forests will not survive the B.C. Liberal government’s current policy of ancient forest liquidation. These globally rare ancient forests are being turned into a sea of giant stumps and tree plantations,” he said.
John Cash, Port Renfrew Chamber of Commerce president, said it is disappointing that old-growth logging is accelerating just as the Pacific Marine Circle Route is being promoted as a scenic tourist attraction.
“Even on that road they didn’t allow a buffer, so it’s clearcut right up to the edge of the road. I get comments about it all the time,” he said.
Tourists want to see big trees and Port Renfrew has some of the biggest, Cash said.
“But it’s like open warfare here. They are sacrificing short-term monetary benefit for the logging companies to the long-term detriment of the community,” he said.
“If the forest companies had been responsible to begin with and had done their planting and management properly, there would be no need to cut down old-growth forests.”
The largest stumps found by the alliance were on land being logged by Surrey-based Teal-Jones Group.
Teal-Jones spokesman John Pichugin did not return calls Thursday.
Forests Minister Pat Bell said that on Vancouver Island 900,000 hectares of the 1.9 million hectares of Crown land is old-growth.
“There is no shortage of old-growth on Vancouver Island. It represents a significant part of the Island,” Bell said.
Vancouver Island also has 438,000 hectares in protected areas and parks, many of which include old-growth forests and, in the area around Port Renfrew, 19,000 hectares are protected in old-growth management areas, he said.
“I think there’s a good balance there already, but it is always worth looking at specific sites,” he said.
The alliance is asking government to inventory and protect old-growth forests where they are scarce and to ensure sustainable logging of second-growth forests.
However, Bell said forest companies are already shifting to second growth.
Meanwhile, the alliance is launching a new Facebook group, Canada’s biggest stumps, where members can compete to upload photos of the largest tree stumps they have found.
“With relatively few eyes and ears out there monitoring what is going on in our forests, photo expeditions and competitions like this will help to show the public what serious environmental destruction is happening just down the backroads of the land they call homes,” said AFA co-founder TJ Watt.
Old-growth forest activists turn to Facebook
/in News CoverageSome Vancouver Island environmentalists who say they discovered tree stumps as wide as a living room are turning to Facebook for help raising awareness of what’s being lost through old-growth logging.
The members of Ancient Forest Alliance are asking others to also upload their photos to the group “Canada’s Biggest Stumps.”
“Most people are unaware that this is still going on,” said Ken Wu, one of the organizers.
He was among the group who discovered the stumps on an expedition last month.
He called logging old-growth trees “incredibly sad” and claimed it happens with “regular occurrence.”
“It’s like shooting black rhinos … there are so few of these monumental trees left.”
On Vancouver Island, about 75 per cent of the old-growth forests have been logged, according to the group.
In the Lower Mainland, the Fraser Valley and Squamish River areas have scarce old-growth forests as well.
“Most jurisdictions on the planet would drool to have the type of forests that we have,” said Wu.
“Its nuts to think that it’s okay to cut the last remnants of it down.”
“Canada’s Biggest Stumps Competition” Launched
/in Media ReleaseDiscovery of numerous 12 to 15 feet (3.7 to 4.6 meters) wide old-growth stumps recently logged near the Avatar Grove on Vancouver Island prompts creation of a new Facebook group where members can upload their largest stump photos.
Victoria, BC – The recent discovery of a series of massive, 12 to 15 feet (3.7 to 4.6 meters) wide old-growth redcedar stumps in the Gordon River Valley near the magnificent but endangered Avatar Grove near Port Renfrew on Vancouver Island has prompted a new BC environmental group, the Ancient Forest Alliance (AFA), to launch a new Facebook group today. Members of the Facebook group can upload photos of the largest tree stumps they have found in Canada.
See the new photos of the recently cut trees and the new Facebook group (note: you don’t need a Facebook account to view the images) at:
https://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=111659885542266&v=photos
The resulting photogallery will help to raise public awareness about the demise of BC’s spectacular but endangered old-growth forests and their replacement by second-growth tree plantations that lack the unique species, tourism values, and vast carbon reserves of the original ancient forests. Participants who take the most spectacular photos will receive a complementary poster of Canada’s largest Douglas fir (Red Creek Fir) or Sitka spruce (San Juan Spruce) trees, both located near Port Renfrew.
“With relatively few ‘eyes and ears’ out there monitoring what is going on in our forests, photo expeditions and competitions like this will help to show the public what serious environmental destruction is happening just down the backroads of the land they call home. The logging of centuries-old giant trees with trunks as wide as a living room is happening every day in this province,” notes TJ Watt, co-founder of the AFA and self-styled big-tree hunter. “How many jurisdictions on the planet still think it’s fine to allow the logging of endangered old-growth forests where trees can live to be almost 2000 years old and grow as tall as skyscrapers?”
Last month, during an expedition to the Gordon River Valley north of Port Renfrew, Ancient Forest Alliance campaigners TJ Watt, Brendan Harry, and Ken Wu found hundreds of giant stumps that were cut within the past year. Among them, they found nearly a dozen stumps with diameters between 12 to 15 (3.7 to over 4.6 meters wide) across. These old-growth trees were cut down on public (Crown) lands in Tree Farm License (TFL) 46 in the tenure of Surrey-based Teal Jones. One of the most disturbing clearcuts was located just over one kilometer from the recently discovered Avatar Grove.
“For years we have been highlighting the beauty of the biggest and most magnificent old growth trees on Vancouver Island. However, at this point people need to understand the urgency of the situation – most of our remaining old-growth forests will not survive the BC Liberal government’s current policy of ancient forest liquidation. These globally rare ancient forests are being turned into a sea of giant stumps and tree plantations as we speak. We must highlight the urgency of the situation and hold the BC Liberal government accountable for its totally antiquated, backwards, anti-environmental policies,” states Ken Wu, Ancient Forest Alliance co-founder. “By ensuring the sustainable logging of second-growth forests, which constitute the vast majority of forest lands in southern BC, and ending the export of BC raw logs to foreign mills, we can save our last old-growth forests while sustaining BC forestry jobs at the same time.”
The Avatar Grove is about the most easily accessible, spectacular stand of endangered old-growth redcedars and Douglas firs in BC, growing on relatively flat terrain near a paved road in close proximity to the town of Port Renfrew. The Grove includes “Canada’s gnarliest tree”, a giant red cedar with a 12 feet (3.7 meter) wide, contorted burl. A small portion of the Grove is protected within an Old-Growth Management Area, but most of its largest trees have been surveyed and flagged for logging. (See photos at https://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=480609145246&v=photos). So far the Ministry of Forests and Range has not issued any cutting permits for the Avatar Grove.
Old-growth forests are important for sustaining species at risk, tourism, clean water, and First Nations traditional cultures.
About 75% of the original productive old-growth forests have been logged on Vancouver Island, including 90% of the valley bottoms where the largest trees grow, according to satellite photos. Only about 6% of the Island’s original, productive old-growth forests are protected in parks.
With so little of our ancient forests remaining, the Ancient Forest Alliance is calling on the BC Liberal government to:
– Undertake a Provincial Old-Growth Strategy that will inventory and protect old-growth forests where they are scarce (egs. Vancouver Island, Lower Mainland, southern Interior, etc.).
– Ensure the sustainable logging of second-growth forests, which now constitute the vast majority of BC’s landscapes.
– End the export of raw logs in order to ensure guaranteed log supplies for local milling and value-added industries.
– Assist in the retooling and development of mills and value-added facilities to handle second-growth logs.
– Undertake new land-use planning initiatives based on First Nations land-use plans, ecosystem-based scientific assessments, and climate mitigation strategies involving forest protection.
“At this late hour, who’s still saying let’s go to the end of the resource and finish off the last of our unprotected ancient forests on Vancouver Island? Only a small number of resource extraction extremists – which unfortunately includes the BC Liberal government at this point – think the industry is entitled to take the last unprotected stands of our spectacular ancient trees here,” states Wu.