Saturday 14 September 2024

Oh Jeez, Is That Kjell's Cat?


    The winter of 1991-92 was an unusually warm one.  It was so warm and had given us so little snow, that by February 27th, I was able to start riding my bike to work, much earlier than on other years.  One day as I was biking home from work, I noticed that just beyond our driveway there was what looked like,  the remains of a furry roadkill.  

    “Oh Jeez,” I thought, “I bet that was one of our neighbor Kjell’s cat.”  I biked on past our driveway so I could take the body of the poor cat off of the road and down to Kjell’s house.  

    When I got closer to the corpse, I discovered that it wasn’t Kjell’s cat, but a skunk.

    It didn’t smell much, so I carefully picked the body up and carried it over to the to the opposite side of the road and up the slope a bit, where I laid it down, so some other critter could eat it.   I turned the bike around and went home.  

You can view my paintings at:  davidmarchant2.ca
 

Friday 13 September 2024

The Golden Spruce: I Met the Guy That Destroyed It


    Here is a blog that I posted in 2013, it concerns something I still think about today.


       I have a horrible memory when it comes to remembering people’s names.  Half a second after being introduced to someone, I am standing there trying to remember what their name is.  I find it very interesting therefore, that I remembered the name of a person who came into the forestry office in 1987 to get some maps.

        I was the guy who was in charge of maps.  Whenever someone wanted maps of the area around McBride, it was usually me they came to see.  I can’t remember what maps this 39 year old man wanted, I don’t really remember very much about the encounter.

        He was doing some kind of work for the local mill, probably logging road layout or timber cruising.  I must have talked to him for a while about other things too, and there must have been something I found interesting about that forgotten conversation, because even though I never met him again, 10 years after this brief meeting I still remembered his name:  It was Grant Hadwin.

        At that time, growing on the shore beside a big river on Haida Gwaii (formally known as Queen Charlotte Island) which is off the wild BC Pacific coastline, there grew a big Sitka spruce tree.  It was 300 years old and 50 meters tall.  That is not unusually huge for the area, but unlike other Sitka spruce trees, this one had golden colored needles.  Even though it had this mutation, which should have been fatal, it seemed to thrive.  Because it stood out, against the sea of green trees, it became something of great spiritual importance to the Haida people, it also became a mascot for the local town, and MacBlo, (a giant forest company), even created a bit of a reserve around it, as they clearcut most of the other forests around the area.

        Even though I was totally unaware of the “Golden Spruce” tree, I and most of the people in BC, were shocked on Jan, 22, 1997 to hear the news that someone had swam across the river in the middle of the night with a chainsaw and cut down the Golden Spruce.  I was even more disturbed later when I heard that the RCMP had charged someone named Grant Hadwin with the deed.

        I often wondered if it was the same Grant Hadwin I had met in our forestry office, but I wasn’t able to find out at the time.  Much later I was talking to Naomi, our librarian, and she mentioned that the McBride man who had been in charge of our local lumber mill had been interviewed by John Vailant, the author of the book, “The Golden Spruce.”  This of course, really spurred my curiosity and that night I downloaded the book from the library onto my iPad and began reading.

       Here is what I learned from reading the book:

         It was the same Grant Hadwin.  He had become very disillusioned with all of the logging that was eradicating BC of its old growth forests, especially on the coast of BC.  Hadwin had almost superman abilities when it came to his physical abilities, he was talented in doing layout work for forest companies, and possessed unusual toughness when it came to living out in the wilderness.

        He had taken a road layout job for the McBride lumber mill, and the mill was very pleased with his work.  

            He then took 10 days off, went up to camp out on a mountain near McBride, and when he came down he was changed.  On the mountain, he had some kind of mystic experience, his former ecological “sins” caused by working for the forest industry were forgiven, and he was “chosen” by the “creator of all life” to show humanity the error of their ways.

        When he returned to work, there was something spooky about his eyes, and when he told the mill manager that what they were doing was wrong; he was let go, and disappeared from the Robson Valley, but it seems that maybe something had been planted in his head while on the local mountain, that set him off in a direction that would forever link his name with infamy and mystery.

        One night in the darkness, Grant Hadwin swam across the river that separated the Golden Spruce from the nearby town, towing a chainsaw.  He cut down the Golden Spruce as a protest to the logging company.  It was a stupid and misguided thing to do because it made everyone hate him. He was arrested and charged.

    When his court case came up, he decided he was going to kayak the 100 kms across the strait to Haida Gwaii for his hearing, but he never arrived, and no one is quite sure if he is dead or alive.

        “The Golden Spruce” is a very interesting read, and is full of facts about BC’s coast and Grant’s unusual life.  I found its references to McBride of special interest, of course, but it was also full of facts  about BC’s history, biology, and its forest industry.

        I read through my 1987 diary to see if I had written down anything about Grant Hadwin, but  I found nothing.  I sure wish I could remember what we had talked about.  Like him, I held the same feelings about the greedy forest industry, and assume that it was that common ground which we discussed, but I don’t honestly remember.

    Cutting down the Golden Spruce was both sad and maddening.  He  alienated environmentalist, logging companies, natives, and most of BC by his act of needlessly destroying a unique part of the natural world, in his failed attempt to show the hypocrisy of the forest industry which saved one special tree for publicity, while wiping out whole mountainsides and valleys of others.

Take a look at my paintings:  davidmarchant2.ca
 

Thursday 12 September 2024

Meeting a Wild Timber Wolf


    One Sunday afternoon in the first week of January, 1992, I had a memorable wildlife encounter.  I had hiked up the mountain slope across the road from our house to the rock bluffs.  There was very little snow on the ground, so I didn’t need snowshoes.  As I climbed up the slope I happened upon three deer that scrambled away, so that seemed like my hike was already worthwhile, and I continued with my climb not expecting to see any more wildlife.

    When I got to the edge of the forest, at the foot of the rock slide which is scattered beneath the bluffs, I was astounded to see, calmly laying upon the snow-covered moss on the top of a kitchen table-sized boulder, a black timber wolf.  It looked like a black German Shepherd dog.  It was about 25 meters away.  I stood there amazed, frozen, and stunned at seeing the wild predator.  It got up from its prone resting position, and stretched, while never taking its yellow eyes off of me.

    Neither of us panicked, we just stood frozen, staring at each other for probably five minutes.  Then, not wanting to engage or appear threatening to the wolf, I slowly began to back away from it.  I did finally turn my back on the wolf and began slowly hiking back down the hill, but not without periodically taking a cautionary glance behind me.

    It was an unforgettable first encounter I had with a timber wolf, an animal I had never seen before in the wild, although I knew they were around.  I was thrilled at my unexpected meeting of one of the legendary northern wild predators on the slope just across the road from our house.

        Timber wolves are rarely seen, and sadly I didn’t have my camera along when I met the timber wolf.  I took the photo above decades later, when I saw this wolf in the snow, down by the river.


View my paintings at:  davidmarchant2.ca


 

Wednesday 11 September 2024

How the Sinking of the Titanic Effected the Robson Valley


    When one hears about the sinking of the Titanic, their thoughts mostly concern the horrific loss of life and the trauma of those that were lucky enough to be rescued, but with something as monumental as the Titanic’s sinking, there can be ripples of effects that can reach some unexpected places.  After the sinking, one of those ripples reached the Robson Valley.

    At the time, in 1912, the Grand Trunk Pacific Railway was constructing a rail line across Canada.  One of the ways railways made their money was by constructing big fancy hotels in beautiful places, to entice people to buy railway tickets to travel to those exotic hotels.  Examples of those exquisite hotels in Western Canada include The Banff Springs Hotel in Banff National Park and the Jasper Park Lodge in Jasper National Park.  

    The Grand Trunk Pacific Railroad, as it constructed its way across Western Canada, also planned to build a big fancy tourist hotel at the foot of Mt. Robson, the spectacular, highest mountain peak in the Canadian Rockies.  Such a destination hotel would have totally changed the future economic base of the Robson Valley and put it on the tourist map, however the Hotel Mount Robson was never built.

    The President of the Grand Trunk Pacific Railway was a man named Charles Melville Hays.  Unfortunately, Mr. Hays booked a ticket on the maiden voyage of the Titanic, and went down with the ship.  His loss threw a wrench into the Grand Trunk Pacific’s plans.  The company managed to finish the railway from Eastern Canada, passing through the Robson Valley all the way to Prince Rupert, BC on the Pacific Coast, however monetary problems caused them to scrap the building of Hotel Mount Robson.  

    Places like Banff and Jasper (before this summer’s fire) became very popular tourist destinations, but Mt. Robson, while extraordinarily beautiful, pretty much stayed off of the tourist radar.  One can only imagine how the future of the Robson Valley might have changed, if it hadn’t been for an iceberg floating out in the faraway Atlantic Ocean.


You can take a look at my paintings at:  davidmarchant2.ca


 

Tuesday 10 September 2024

It's Beginning to Feel Like Autumn


     It’s been very hot (and dry) all summer.  Usually by the time September rolls around we have started to feel a bit of a nip in the air, and last night it began.  This morning when we woke up our thermometer read 1°C (34°F) and when walking Kona, I noticed there was frost on a few plants.  

    After months and months of higher than normal heat, this dip in temperature felt like a shock, but our normal nighttime low for this date is -3°C (27°F), so in reality, even last night’s drop in temperature was still warmer than what is normal.  What we really need is rain, and hopefully the showers forecast for this weekend will actually materialize and lessen our moisture deficit.  My pond is about a foot (30cm) lower than it should be.


View my paintings:  davidmarchant2.ca

Sunday 8 September 2024

Swordplay in the Park


    Yesterday was the Robson Valley Art & Culture Council’s “Maker Faire” at  the Koeneman Park.  I was expecting to see many of the craft demonstrations that I had seen before, like knitting, spinning, quilting, and instrument making, but I was surprised when I came upon a couple of tables displaying swords and armor.   I knew Randy Packer from our library’s writing group (he has written some novels), but I had no clue he was into all of the medieval armor, swords, and related paraphernalia.  

    It seems he has been studying it for years.  He has learned to construct many of the objects in his collection.  I had noticed an area in the park that was ribboned off, but didn’t know why until Randy and his kilted friend, walked the group over to it, to demonstrate a sword fight.  Before the slashing sabers began demonstrating a duel, he cautioned the onlookers giving us warnings about the dangers and warned everyone to stand back.

    Even though I have often said it before, I will say it again:  I am always surprised at the amazing, unusual, and varied talent we have in our little isolated community.







Take a look at my paintings:  davidmarchant2.ca


 

Saturday 7 September 2024

Every Breath You Take


    So here we go again.

    I stepped outside this morning and smelled the smoke.  Our mountains had disappeared from view, somewhere behind the hazy blanket of forest fire smoke that filled the air.  Fortunately for us, the smoke emanates not from a forest fire close to us, but from a distant one probably hundreds of miles away, but we still get to breathe the smoke, and our bodies will continue to be degraded for breathing in its tiny harmful particles.

    The forests of British Columbia continue to burn, luckily, not in the three hundreds as earlier in the summer, but there are still forest fires out there, and people are still having to evacuate their homes because of them.   It has now become something that happens every summer, but it is not something that is easy to get used to.

    Big Oil and their already wealthy investors, still talk the “Green” talk, while increasing production and quietly investing in messages “pooh-poohing” their effects on climate change.  Most people continue to live their lives ignoring science, as the environment becomes worse and worse.  It is horrifying to realize that all of the increasing environmental problems that are occurring today, won’t disappear, but will become increasingly worse every year of the future.

    Sorry, I’ll get off of my soapbox, but I am fearing and hating what is happening to Mother Earth.


 Take a look at my paintings:  davidmarchant2.ca