The great bear rainforest is a treasure
of profoundly old true wilderness unlike most places on this planet. The hand of man has been extremely
light. For a century, some forest was
removed and will now fully recover. Man
never was able to establish a successful lifeway in these forests that could
possibly support a community. The salmon
culture was always on the forest’s edge rather than truly a part of the forest.
The simple effort to merely walk
through the forest itself will quickly cause one to understand why. Deadfalls over three meters thick soon cure
one of attempting a compass march as you are forced to adopt natural ridgelines
and the like. Bushwhacking through the
boreal forest is a hard day’s work and vastly more difficult here. Cutting roads in the tumbled mountain terrain
is just as difficult which is why they are so few.
It all can be done for the big
timber, but that alone bespeaks the greater costs involved.
Humanity has not recycled this
forest as it has done to both the Congo and the Amazon and everywhere
in between far beyond our imaginings. As
this travel log expresses, it is well worth the effort to cruise its shores.
Exploring the wild shores of B.C.'s Great Bear Rainforest
BY MARK SISSONS, FOR
THE CALGARY
HERALD
A mother grizzly grazes on the shoreline sedges of Khutze Inlet midway
along the Great Bear Rainforest coast.
As dusk descends, an explosion of violence shatters the tranquility of
the world's largest remaining tract of unspoiled ancient temperate rainforest.
The chase is on.
A frantic deer bolts from the woods only metres from where our zodiac
floats on the glassy calm estuary waters. On its heels races a sea wolf in a
blur of black fur and fangs. Nostrils flaring, tongues flapping, predator and
prey swim straight toward us, then veer off across the inlet.
Unable to overtake its swifter dinner on the hoof, the exhausted wolf abandons
the chase and retreats to the rocky shore. There, it paces back and forth,
eyeing us in frustration as hungry members of its pack howl for updates from
deep within B.C.'s Great Bear Rainforest.
Named for the bears that inhabit its thickly forested islands and
inlets - including grizzlies, American black bears and Spirit bears (a black
bear born with a recessive gene that produces cream coloured fur) - this vast,
mostly uninhabited archipelago twice the size of the Serengeti stretches from
the northern tip of Vancouver Island to the Alaska border. It is also home to countless
species of birds, marine life and other mammals, including coastal wolves that
can hunt salmon from streams like bears and swim like sea otters.
"The Great Bear Rainforest is so remote that it's one of the few
remaining inhabitable parts of the world that is completely black at night on
satellite images," says Kevin Smith, owner and captain of the Maple Leaf,
B.C.'s oldest operational tall ship. I'm aboard his 92-foot, two-masted,
mahogany-lined schooner for a unique weeklong midsummer nautical natural
history tour.
It wasn't until the 1990s that environmentalists coined the name Great
Bear Rainforest and began drawing public attention to the devastating logging
practises that companies were inflicting on what they then called the Mid-Coast
Timber Supply Area. In 2006, an agreement between the B.C. government and a
coalition of conservationists, loggers, hunters, and First Nations established
a 400kilometre-long protected coastal area.
Today, only a handful of tourist-toting ships like the Maple Leaf
operate along the coast of this magnificently rugged, rain-swept wilderness,
where snowcapped peaks loom over precipitous, forested fjords that plunge into
deep dark channel waters.
And what a ship the Maple Leaf is. Originally built in 1904 as a luxury
racing yacht by Vancouver
timber titan Alexander Maclaren, she began life as the queen of the West Coast
sailing scene. Then resurfaced as the most legendary halibut longliner of her time,
fishing the brutal Bering Sea for over 40
years.
Restored to her original glory in 1986, this maritime marvel has
cruised the coast from Bella Bella to Alaska ever since, introducing
generations of eco-travellers to one of the world's last remaining truly wild
places. Up here, mist often lingers in the tangy salt air like a primordial
stage curtain, occasionally parted by rainbows to reveal a world of untouched
natural beauty that Smith lovingly calls "a blueprint for how the world
can repair itself."
During our voyage from Bella Bella to Prince Rupert , some days are blustery, and
others gloriously sunny. But we are thankfully spared much of the pelting rain
and gale force winds that give this tempestuous stretch of the North Pacific
such a stormy reputation.
Each day brings fresh adventures. We take frequent shore excursions,
marching through boggy estuaries under the tutelage of the ship's naturalist,
Briony Penn, searching for indigenous plants with names like queen's cup and
dwarf dogwood, paintbrush and devil's club. There are soaks in hidden natural hot springs , forays in
search of ancient petroglyphs, fishing off the Maple Leaf's stern, and sailing
when weather permits. Most popular are evenings on deck spent feasting on
freshly caught giant Dungeness crabs and jumbo prawns, washed down with fine
B.C. and international wines.
One brisk morning we stretch our sea legs following fresh wolf tracks
along a deserted island's sandy white beach and hike through old growth forest,
where we're careful to leave minimal traces of our passing. Another afternoon,
we bless the ship at a thundering waterfall.
This involves Captain Smith steering the Maple Leaf's bowsprit right to
the spray-soaked edge of one of the countless waterfalls lining the route. Just
close enough, it turns out, for first mate Greg Shea to fill an outstretched
tumbler with arguably the purest H2O on Earth.
Along the route we encounter few other traces of humanity until we pay
a visit to Klemtu, an isolated Kitasoo and XaisXais First Nations village of
400 that's only accessible by boat or plane.
Adorned with the clan emblems of the eagle, wolf, killer whale and
raven, Klemtu's mammoth red cedar "Bighouse" hosts important cultural
events - the naming of children, traditional potlatches and ceremonies to
honour the deceased - that help to preserve Native culture all along this
coastline.
Botany and cultural excursions aside, the most magnetic lure for most
of the Maple Leaf's eight passengers is catching glimpses of whales, wolves,
dolphins and, of course, bears. Since the elusive Spirit bear - estimated to
now only number between 100 and 400 - rarely emerges from deep within the
forests of Princess Royal and Gribble Islands until fall salmon spawning
season, we pin our hopes on grizzly sightings, although Smith encourages us to
lay our species checklists aside and simply "put ourselves in the path of
the magic."
Turns out, the magic is all around us as we explore some of the same
secluded bays, marshy inlets and swift flowing channels that Captain George
Vancouver and other early European explorers once charted, and that First
Nations peoples have called home for thousands of years.
Magic in the exuberance of white sided river dolphins and Dall's
porpoises as they race alongside our ship, darting in and out of the water like
aquatic bullet trains. In the friendly flicks of humpback tails, the slapstick
routines of sea otters, and the precision-guided dive-bombing runs of eagles
and sandhill cranes. And most powerfully, during our first close encounter with
grizzlies in a waterfall-draped cove called Khutze Inlet.
Engine cut, our zodiac silently glides toward the inlet's shore, where
we spot a 400-pound grizzly and her fluffy cub grazing on shoreline sedges and
giant-leafed skunk cabbage. Everyone tenses with excitement, but not fear,
because we're in good hands. With a decade of experience as a B.C. park ranger,
Smith knows grizzlies and what safety precautions to take. We'll get
respectfully close, but immediately retreat at the first hint of disturbance.
Both bears seem blissfully undisturbed by our presence, and let us drift
closer. That's for two reasons, explains skipper Smith.
"With us nearby she knows that the male grizzlies will keep their
distance because they are especially uncomfortable around humans," Smith
says, pointing out that males may try to kill young cubs that are not their
genetic offspring. "Mama bear is also relaxed because she knows that we're
not here to shoot her," he adds.
Bear shootings have dropped dramatically since 2005, when the team of
conservationists and scientists at Raincoast Conservation Foundation purchased
the commercial hunting licence for a vast area here three times the size of Yellowstone National Park , effectively blocking
access to trophy hunters. This innovative approach has helped protect bears and
other trophy hunting targets like coastal wolves - already threatened by loss
of habitat and a declining salmon supply - from the crosshairs of high-powered
rifles.
As our ursine neighbours munch their way toward the water's edge, they
take turns rearing up on hind legs to sniff for danger and locate each other in
the tall sedge. Then, as suddenly as the deer and wolf had plunged into the
water, so do the bears. Startled by something (a nearby male?), they paddle
past us like furry torpedoes, noses just clearing the water. Seconds later,
they clamber onto the safety of the far shore.
Then vanish into the dark woods.
No lingering like the frustrated sea wolf for this pair. Although the
cub can't resist glancing back at these colourful and curious creatures that
have respectfully and peacefully entered the lair of the great bears.
If You Go
- About Maple Leaf Adventure: Voted one of National Geographic
Traveler's 2011 Tours of a Lifetime, Maple Leaf Adventures offers several small
group, multi-day sailing cruises into the Great Bear Rainforest between April
and October, as well as tours to Haida Gwaii, the Gulf Islands, Vancouver
Island and Alaska's Inside Passage. For more information, visit mapleleafadventures.com or
call 1-888-599-5323
- Getting there: The Great Bear Rainforest trips start in Bella Bella
and end in Prince Rupert ,
both of which are accessible by regular, daily commercial flights.
Maple Leaf offers complete travel planning assistance and arranges for
taxi or shuttle services to and from airports.
- Staying there: Prince Rupert
has a range of hotels and motels, including the Crest Hotel, which offers
panoramic waterfront views. In Bella Bella, no accommodation is necessary
because guests of Maple Leaf Adventures arrive and depart for the Great Bear
Rainforest on the same day.
- Things to do: In Prince Rupert ,
explore the historic Cow
Bay area, which is lined
with interesting cafés and shops. From there, it is a short walk to the Museum
of Northern B.C., which features traditional northwest coast architecture and
exhibits that explore the fascinating history of the area's First Nations. Also
worth a visit is the Firehall
Museum , which displays a
rebuilt 1925 R.E.O. Speedwagon fire engine. Prince Rupert is also a world famous sport
fishing destination.
- Conservation: For more information about the Raincoast Conservation
Foundation's efforts to protect the lands, waters and wildlife of coastal British Columbia ,
visit www.raincoast.org.
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