Visiting the Ancient Forest in BC - 2000 year old trees
Last Friday a friend of ours took Cara and me on a trip to the Ancient Forest near Prince George, BC, Canada. It was quite impressive. Beautiful landscape and enormous trees with an age of around thousand and in some instances even two thousand years.
That trail is a piece of history in its own way. It's amazing to think that some of those trees were already there before the fall of Rome.
Generally I can say that the Beautiful British Columbia on the car licence plates is definitely justified.
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What Will it Take to Save BC's Old-Growth Forests?
Summer 2018 marked the 25-year anniversary of the Clayoquot Sound mass blockades, where over 12,000 people took part in the largest act of civil disobedience in Canadian history to protect the area’s remaining intact ancient forests from logging. 25 years on, old-growth forests in Clayoquot Sound and across BC are still awaiting protection and, on Vancouver Island, thousands of hectares of ancient forest ecosystems are being forever lost to industrial logging each year.
To commemorate these landmark protests, the AFA released a series of films exploring the significance of the War in the Woods of the 80's and 90's, the ecological and economic values of old-growth forests, and the role of Indigenous communities in their protection.
This film, which concludes our series, presents an overview of these issues and the solutions urgently needed to finally protect ancient forests. These solutions, including science-based old-growth protection legislation; policies that ensure sustainable, value-added second-growth forestry; and support for First Nations’ sustainable economic diversification, are fully within reach. They require political will from the NDP provincial government and broad support from British Columbians from all walks of life.
Please help us in calling on the NDP government to finally end the decades-long battle for BC’s ancient forests by sending an instant message at BCForestMovement.com today.
Ancient forests in B.C.
Environmental groups in B.C. are calling attention to the last remaining old growth forests in the west. Avatar Grove, near Port Renfrew, B.C., is one forest that has escaped logging. Conservation biologists say such forests would take hundreds of years to grow back, and tree-planting alone cannot resuscitate such ancient forests.
Ancient Cedar Forest, British Columbia
A few clips from a walk through an ancient cedar forest near Prince George, British Columbia. Some of these cedars are over 1000 years old.
The Incomappleux Documentary - British Coloumbia's Inland Rainforest
British Columbia's Inland Rainforest is the only one of its kind on Earth. The Incomappleux Valley shows us that one place can be a cathedral, a carbon sink and a haven for old growth biodiversity at the same time. We have the opportunity protect this precious ecosystem, and as this film explains, we must do it now - David Suzuki. Canadian Filmmaker Riel Marquardt invites us to share the experiences of Ancient 1000+ year old trees, the mystery of the magic pond, Mountain Caribou's fight for survival, rare and new to science species, rare intact ecosystems, eagles, wolves, grizzly bears, and the global importance of old growth forests.
Old Growth Forests on Vancouver Island | Presentation by Ken Wu & TJ Watt of Ancient Forest Alliance
Hear internationally renowned photographer, TJ Watt, and executive director of the Ancient Forest Alliance, Ken Wu, speak to the importance in preservation and natural beauty of the old-growth forests along the coasts of British Columbia.
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Ancient Forest, British Columbia
This place is a must-see if you find yourself near Prince George, BC. You'll be captivated, as we were!
Fighting to protect B.C.’s ancient forests
Environmentalists are using social media to lobby the B.C. government to protect the ancient trees in Vancouver Island’s temperate rainforest from logging companies.
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Ancient Forest of Northern BC
The Ancient Forest recreation site and trail is a beloved and unique hiking area with a universal access boardwalk thanks to thousands of volunteer hours coordinated by the Caledonia Ramblers Hiking Club.
The watershed of the upper Fraser River has given rise to a unique inland wet-temperate rainforest; a forest ecosystem that combines attributes of both the coastal wet-temperate rainforests of British Columbia and adjacent boreal forests of Alberta and the far north.
The Ancient Forest Trail on the south side of Highway 16 near Slim Creek provides an opportunity to view an Antique Forest stand within BC's inland rainforest. The trailhead, located 113 km east of Prince George (6.6 km west of the Slim Creek rest area), is marked by a large sign on the right hand side of the highway (heading east) marked Ancient Forest. Pull into the trailhead parking lot and spend an hour or two walking through one of BC's best kept secrets. The trail is an easy-moderate hike marked with interpretative signage, and is home to a beautiful waterfall.
The Walbran Valley's Castle Grove - Canada's Finest Old-Growth Cedar Forest
Please sign and share our petition at:
The endangered Castle Grove is the finest stand of unprotected monumental ancient redcedars in Canada - it is the largest, densest, and most intact of such remaining stands. The Lower Castle Grove includes the Castle Giant, an enormous, 16 foot (5 meter) diameter western redcedar that is one of the largest trees in Canada, and both the Lower and Upper Castle Grove are jam-packed with a high density of enormous trees. Marbled murrelets, screech owls, Queen Charlotte goshawks, red- legged frogs, cougars, black bears, and black-tailed deer all live in the Upper Castle Grove, while steelhead and coho salmon spawn in the Walbran River below. Most of western Vancouver Island including the Walbran Valley is within the territory of the Nuu-cha-nulth First Nations people.
In the summer of 2012 survey tape for logging was discovered in the Upper Castle Grove. However, after a large-scale public awareness and mobilization campaign led by the Ancient Forest Alliance, the BC government announced in November that the company, Teal-Jones, had rescinded its plans to log the grove. Now, follow-up legal protection is needed for this incredible forest.
The Castle Grove has been featured in numerous media reports on BC's old-growth forests for over two decades, including the front pages of the Victoria Times Colonist and in the Vancouver Sun. The Walbran Valley was the focus of early protests against old-growth logging in 1991 and 1992, playing an important role in the build-up towards the massive Clayoquot Sound protests near Tofino on Vancouver Island in 1993.
In the spring of 2011, the BC Liberal government promised to implement a new legal tool to protect the province's largest trees and monumental groves. Of all places where such a designation would make most sense, it would be in the Castle Grove. However, more importantly, more comprehensive ecosystem-level protection for our old-growth forests on a much larger scale is fundamentally needed. The Ancient Forest Alliance is calling on the BC Liberal government and the NDP Opposition to commit to implementing a BC Old-Growth Strategy that will inventory and protect old-growth forests wherever they are scarce (such as on Vancouver Island, in the Lower Mainland, in the BC Interior, etc.). The AFA is also calling on the BC Liberal government to ensure the sustainable logging of second-growth forests, which constitute most of the forests in southern BC, and to ensure a guaranteed log supply for BC mills and value-added wood manufacturers by ending the export of raw logs to foreign mills.
Filmed and edited by TJ Watt. Camera - Canon 5D MKII.
Music: Solo Acoustic Guitar by Jason Shaw (
CHEK News - The Fight For Our Ancient Forests, BC Parks, and the Carmanah Valley
May, 18th, 2011 - Local news station CHEK TV's Island 30 featured environmentalist Vicky Husband and Ancient Forest Alliance's Ken Wu speaking on the state of BC's parks during their 100 year anniversary.
The story focuses on the Carmanah Walbran Provincial Park and highlights the need to increase parks funding and maintenence in these spectacular places as well as the need to expand protected areas to include the remaining endangered old-growth forests on Vancouver Island and southern BC and shift instead to logging second-growth forests sustainably.
The Ancient Forest Fraser Fort George : Exploring Canada RakuJohnVlog 01
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Ancient Forest/Chun T’oh Whudujut Provincial Park
Ancient Forest Recreation Site, Fraser Fort George, BC
The watershed of the upper Fraser River has given rise to a unique inland wet-temperate rainforest; a forest ecosystem that combines attributes of both the coastal wet-temperate rainforests of British Columbia and adjacent boreal forests of Alberta and the far north.
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2019 - Enchanted Forest, British Columbia, Canada
I couldn't imagine a life without my son, Tyler. He has changed my life forever!
Did You Know ? BC's Biggest Trees and Ancient Forests - Shaw TV
Here is a short clip about the biggest trees and endangered old-growth forests of British Columbia, with the Ancient Forest Alliance's Ken Wu, which aired in August of 2015 on Shaw TV's southern Vancouver Island station.
Sustainable Forest Management in B.C.
B.C. is recognized as a global leader in sustainable forest management, meeting the environmental, social and economic needs of current and future generations. Stringent forest laws, skilled forestry professionals, comprehensive monitoring and enforcement support our renewable resource. This is further reinforced by Canada being the international leader in forest certification, with B.C. contributing more than any other province. The forest sector plays an important role in the B.C. economy providing jobs for people and revenue for hospitals, schools and other public institutions. In B.C. there are over 5,300 skilled forest professions ensuring B.C. forests are here for generations to come.
To learn more about B.C.'s sustainable forests, visit naturallywood.com/sustainable-forests.
Natural Ancient Forest - Cathedral Grove, Vancouver Island, British Columbia inspirational travel
Cathedral Grove, located in MacMillan Provincial Park, is one of the most accessible stands of giant Douglas fir trees on Vancouver Island. Here visitors can stroll through a network of trails under the shadow of towering ancient Douglas-fir trees, majestic pillars untouched by the modern world -- some more than 800 years old.
Trails on either side of the highway lead visitors through the mighty stands of this coastal forest. On the south side you will find the largest Douglas firs -- one measuring more than 9 metres in circumference. On the northern side of the road you'll find groves of ancient Western red cedar standing sentry over nearby Cameron Lake.
The park has been restoring some of its trails after a severe windstorm on New Year's Day in 1997, which changed the look of the park forever. The storm toppled hundreds of huge trees and obliterated sections of the trail system. Some sections of the trail system were so badly hit that they have never been reopened. Restoration and cleanup began almost as soon as the winds stopped, and although visitors will now find many of these huge trees lying on the ground, their value has not diminished. These fallen trees open the canopy to provide light, space, shelter and nutrients for the next generations of plants. Natural regeneration is beginning to restore the Grove's pristine beauty and the park's diversity, making a visit to Cathedral Grove all the more intriguing.
Improvements to MacMillan Park can be supported by feeding the donation tree next to the main trail; your contributions will be used for youth team trail projects, volunteer projects, revegetation projects and new signs. The park's small size and accessibility has left it vulnerable to impacts from high visitor use. Please stay on designated trails, where you will find ample opportunities to view and photograph this bit of history.
Special Features: The park protects and preserves an internationally significant representative example of Douglas fir old-growth forest within the Coastal Western Hemlock Biogeoclimatic Zone.
Park Size: 301 hectares BizBOXTV
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Maps Showing the Disappearance of Old-Growth Forests on Vancouver Island - 1900 to 2016
This series of maps in a time sequence over a century shows the history of old-growth logging on Vancouver Island - the systematic annihilation of the grandest conifer forests on Earth outside the US redwoods over century. Maps provided by Commons BC, based on government data, satellite imagery, and aerial photos. Send a Message to BC's politicians to protect our old-growth forests and to ensure a sustainable, second-growth forest industry at BCForestMovement.com
British Columbia's forest industry today
Manager, First Nations & Forestry Partnerships with Interfor Coastal Woodlands, Rhiannon Poupard discusses Why Forests Matter.
Launched in September 2013, the Nature Conservancy of Canada's (NCC’s) Why Forests Matter speaker series visited four cities across Canada throughout 2014! Audiences gathered in Toronto, Halifax, Montreal and Vancouver to hear from a multidisciplinary panels that shared their perspectives on the value of forests, their influence on society, and why they matter to Canadians.
For more information about Why Forests Matter events visit,
Canada's Mossiest Rainforest aka Fangorn Forest
Please SIGN our PETITION at
This is the unprotected Mossy Maple Grove, Canada's mossiest rainforest, a stand of enormous old-growth Bigleaf maple trees -- some as much as 2 meters (7 feet) wide in trunk diameter -- completely draped in hanging gardens of mosses and ferns found just south of Cowichan Lake on southern Vancouver Island, BC. This is in the traditional territory of Cowichan Tribes who are part of the Hul'qumi'num Treaty Group.
Unlike other spotlighted old-growth forests in BC that have all been coniferous or needle-leaf trees (Douglas firs, Sitka spruce, western redcedars, etc.), this is an old-growth deciduous or broad-leaf rainforest. This area has also been nicknamed Fangorn Forest after the forest in The Lord of the Rings.
View the awesome PHOTO GALLERY of the grove here:
Filmed and edited by TJ Watt.
Music - Razorback Sucker by Tom Fahy (
ancient cedar forest british columbia
The trees are alive and really enchanting here