Note: As you read this article local citizens are at Cathedral Grove in the hopes of putting a stop to this destruction.
Island Lens #96
March 18, 2008
Spring is here, birds are nesting, Elk are in the valley
with calves, and small animals are giving birth to their young. A tour
of the area, with parks manager Dave Foreman and several key
participants in the falling, revealed that more like 40-50 old growth
trees would be blasted along paths, the highway corridor, and anywhere
BC Parks identified as a threat. There will be no straight cuts left by
chainsaws so counting will be difficult.
Parks have
always been designed by human beings for humans, and when their needs
change so do the parameters of the parks. However there is a point
where parks are altered by humans to the point that they no longer
reflect the nature that they were designed to preserve.
Strathcona
Park, the first and oldest BC Provincial Park established in 1911, has
been dissected and compromised over the last century. Logging,
highways, and mining have been allowed to alter the integrity of this
park. Portions of the initial parkland have been pulled out of the
protected area by government and sold or traded to logging companies.

Parks
can also play a key role in rehabilitating a compromised ecosystem
while providing recreational and educational opportunities for the
public.
A prime example locally is the Englishman River Regional Park,
which runs upstream from Top Bridge to Morrison Creek. Officially
opened to the public last fall by the Regional District of Nanaimo, the
Nature Trust of British Columbia, and several other partners, this park
includes second and third growth trees ranging in age from freshly
planted to approximately 50 years old depending on the age of the cut
block.
The park compliments the Salmon Enhancement Project, Englishman
River Watershed Recovery Plan, and several other rehabilitation
projects along the Englishman River. This park combines public needs
with restoration presenting many opportunities through stream keepers
and other groups that help to educate the public.
The needs
of people and nature are interwoven and continue to be linked but
society tends to try managing nature in order to tame it. Controlling
nature may seem like a practical solution to societies fear of the wild
but managing parks for people tends to compromise nature to the point
that is destroyed. The BC Parks Act makes no bones about the fact that
most parks, with the exception of certain components of a class "A"
park, have been set aside for the public to use for recreational
purposes.
Carmanah Provincial park, directly across the
Island from Oceanside due south on the west coast, was protected in
1989 and the lower Walbran Valley was added in 1991. The public
demanded this protection to save some of the last ancient temperate
rainforest as well as to establish a reserve for the Marbled Murrelet
to nest.
Logging has continued all around the
Carmanah/Walbran park and today the clear-cuts run directly along the
boundaries. All access to the park is on industrial logging roads and
when the trees licensed for logging are gone from the companies that
built these roads will have no reason to maintain them.In fact, 2
years ago TimberWest threatened to remove a key bridge so they could
move it to another location.
Already, the roads entering the park are
in such bad shape that it discourages the public from visiting. With
fewer and fewer visitors the government is already beginning to grumble
that the primary purpose for a park is to provide the public with
recreational opportunities.
Industry has already built the roads in and
would like to continue logging. Where is this leading? No people in the
parks, unused timber just standing there rotting, roads in place, need
for economic stability in a declining forest industry.
Written by
Richard Boyce, a documentary filmmaker and photo-journalist who has
spent his life on Vancouver Island. Link to
www.islandbound.ca