800-year-old cedar taken from B.C. park
Culprits returned repeatedly to fell tree and cart valuable wood away
The Canadian Press
Posted: May 18, 2012 4:21 AM PT
Last Updated: May 18, 2012 6:11 AM PT
Torrance Coste sits on the stump of what is said to have been a 800-year-old red cedar that was cut down near the entrance of Carmanah-Walbran Provincial Park on Vancouver Island Saturday. (Canadian Press)
A giant 800-year-old red cedar tree has been poached from a provincial park on southern Vancouver Island, but the culprits who repeatedly returned to the site to hack it down may never be brought to justice.
Torrance Coste of the Wilderness Committee said consistent budget cuts over the last decade mean park rangers rarely monitor remote sites such as the Carmanah-Walbran Provincial Park, from where the cedar was chopped.
"Whoever's doing this knows that no one's going to have eyes on this park for months at a time so it's exceptionally easy to do what they've done," Coste said Thursday.
He said that last month, a member of the environmental group became aware of the poached tree and took a photo of about 20 per cent of its remains.
'It's an example of how poorly protected our parks are that people can come and take our trees without fear.'—Torrance Coste
But when Coste went to the park about two weeks ago, more of the cedar had been cut and removed, he said.
"In the first photo, there were two big sections of the trunk beside the stump and when I went up there, there was only one."
He said a stump measuring about three metres in diameter is all that remains of the tree that was dragged across a parking area, where steel cables were left lying around.
"It's an example of how poorly protected our parks are that people can come and take our trees, without fear of repercussions, from our provincial parks."
Coste said 10 full-time park rangers monitor about 1,000 parks and protected areas across British Columbia, down from about 40 full-time positions in 2001.
Don Closson, who supervises the Cowichan area for B.C. Parks, said Parks officials at the site a year ago noticed that about 80 per cent of the tree had been cut through and that a professional faller was hired to bring it down because it posed a safety hazard.
Valuable as roofing product
"On our return this year we noticed that somebody had gone in and cut up a large portion of the butt and dragged portions of it into the parking lot," he said.
Blocks of red cedar are valuable as a roofing product, Closson said, adding officials have little information in the case.
"We have no eyewitnesses or licence plates at this time."
RCMP Sgt. Dave Voller of the Cowichan Lake detachment, which is about a two-hour drive from the park, said police are investigating the case of the stolen tree but so far don't have much to go on.
"There's not much we can investigate since we have no physical evidence or description of offenders and once wood is removed from the forest, it's extremely difficult to track where it came from," Voller said.
"That's one of the logistical problems with having a park that's miles from anywhere, with no one who is on site as far as management goes," he said.
Likely used for cedar shakes
One RCMP officer works at the Ditidaht First Nation reserve, about 45 minutes from the park, but doesn't have time to patrol the area, Voller said.
He said whoever took the time to chop down the cedar was likely interested in the valuable return from cedar shakes used for roofing.
"It's obviously much more gain than going out and taking a whole pile of firewood. A logging truck loaded with cedar would be worth thousands and thousands of dollars."
Opposition New Democrat MLA Scott Fraser criticized the Liberal government in the legislature for inadequate protection of the province's parks, saying it's obvious people can chop down old trees without being detected.
"To suggest that anyone is able to protect all of those areas to the level that the member suggests is fiscally irresponsible," said Environment Minister Terry Lake.
"I'll tell you what irresponsible is, 10 years ago there were 194 park rangers in British Columbia, there's under 100 now," Fraser said.
Share Tools
Latest British Columbia News Headlines
- Northern Gateway in Canadians' interest, Enbridge tells review board

- Canada will be vulnerable to economic disaster should the Northern Gateway pipeline be rejected, the proponent told a federal review panel Monday as the final phase of public hearings got underway. more »
- Police slashed homeless tents, say advocates in Abbotsford, B.C.
- The Abbotsford, B.C., police chief has ordered an investigation into allegations the city's officers destroyed tents belonging to homeless people, in a second controversy over how the city treats its homeless. more »
- Death of boy in B.C. cancer ride 'heartbreaking'
- Family and friends are mourning the death of Xavier Pelletier, the Grade 10 student from Pacific Christian School in Victoria who was struck and killed while participating in B.C.'s Ride to Conquer Cancer on Sunday. more »
- H.R MacMillan Space Centre's star projector Harold to retire
- After 45 years of service with Vancouver's H.R MacMillan Space Centre, Harold, the centre's star projector is set to retire. more »
Must Watch
Top News Headlines
- Quebec premier says Montreal mayor should resign
- Quebec Premier Pauline Marois says Montreal Mayor Michael Applebaum should step down following his arrest this morning. more »
- Canadians jailed after Dominican post-wedding fight released
- Two Canadian men imprisoned in the Dominican Republic following a post-wedding brawl last month have been released and will be returning to Canada, a family member says. more »
- Northern Gateway in Canadians' interest, Enbridge tells review board

- Canada will be vulnerable to economic disaster should the Northern Gateway pipeline be rejected, the proponent told a federal review panel Monday as the final phase of public hearings got underway. more »
- MPs weigh in on Justin Trudeau charging speaking fees
- The New Brunswick charity that asked Liberal leader Justin Trudeau to return a speaking fee eight months after he appeared at a fundraiser has sparked a debate among MPs about the propriety of accepting money for what some say MPs should do for free. more »
- Parents of son 'brutally beaten' playing hockey want charges
- The class photo that made a father cry
- Teen killed at mill near Vernon identified
- Death of boy in B.C. cancer ride 'heartbreaking'
- Police slashed homeless tents, say advocates in Abbotsford, B.C.
- Cigarette butt deposits proposed for B.C.
- B.C. teen dies on 200-km bike ride for charity
- Wolf seen running along mountain highway again
- 5 Vancouver street festivals you don't want to miss!

