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Imagine cedar trees thousands of years old and several
metres around. This isn’t Haida Gwaii or Vancouver Island. It’s an ancient
rainforest 1000 kilometres inland and UNBC student Dave Radies was the first
to tell people about it.
It’s a place he didn’t set out to find. In fact, Radies was
conducting research on lichen biodiversity and had the area 130 kilometres east
of Prince George targeted as one of his randomly selected research sites. What
he actually found was a relic of the past and a treasure for today. Massive
western red cedar trees, some estimated to be 2000 years old, rise from the
forest floor in numbers not seen anywhere this far north or this far inland.
“It’s just an incredible area,” says Radies. “There are other big trees in the
vicinity, but I’ve never seen something quite like this, where the cedars are
this big and old. It’s like a rainforest, but it’s probably more appropriate to
call it a snow forest because of the amount of snow this region gets in a
typical winter.”
Radies found something else, too: flagging tape, indicating
that the area was designated for logging. Cue the familiar debate about
determining the value of forests. Who or what is most important? Biodiversity?
Resource-based communities? Recreationalists? The forest industry? Sometimes,
the answer is dependent on the context. In the foothills of the Rocky Mountains,
the annual snow and rainfall accumulations are so high that the area resembles a
coastal rainforest. The cedars grow big and old, but they also rot from the
inside so they’re not very useful for typical lumber production. Local sawmills
over the years have tried – and generally failed – to successfully use the
trees, and local employment has suffered as a result. However, in nearby
McBride, the TRC Cedar mill is trying and succeeding, employing 45 people to
make different products such as materials for fencing and roofing. Just two
logging truck loads per day keep the last mill left in the community
running.
But is employment the only forest value worth considering?
Dave Radies doesn’t think so and neither do many other residents of the region.
They’ve built a trail through the Ancient Forest and hope to attract tourists
traveling along Highway 16 between Prince George and Jasper. Radies believes the
biodiversity contained within the area is mind-boggling, with probably 1000
species of lichen and fungi alone. But does that mean the area should be
off-limit to foresters? “Parts of it, definitely, especially the wet cedar
forests,” says Radies. “The area makes up less than 1% of the Prince George
Timber Supply Area, after all. It comes down to recognizing that there are
different kinds of forests and we should be doing more to utilize different tree
species that are more common and grow quickly, such as birch and aspen. That’s
where government policy and leadership has been lacking. We really don’t know
anything about how this old cedar ecosystem works or what would even be an
optimum level of harvesting. These forests are rare and certainly the oldest in
the BC Interior so we only have one chance to do this
right.”
Since stumbling into the Ancient Forest, Radies remains
passionate about the area and the role science can play in ensuring that these
kinds of “snow forests” are managed properly. Multiple UNBC researchers and
classes have visited the region to study the region’s biological systems, and
their value for recreation, biodiversity, and economics. It’s fitting that one
of the oldest and largest trees along the Ancient Forest trail is named the
Radies Tree.
Dave Radies moved to Prince George from Delta in 1998
to pursue a bachelor's degree at UNBC. He has been conducting research in the
forests between Prince George and McBride for 8 years and will be starting his
PhD at UNBC this winter. |
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Dave Radies in the Ancient Forest.
Dave Radies in the Ancient Forest.
Dave Radies in the Ancient Forest.
Dave Radies with the Radies tree in the Ancient Forest.
A map indicating the location of the Ancient Forest Trail.
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