For 10 years, ELF has maintained an interest in forest management and conservation opportunities in the ts’ukw’um Wilson Creek Watershed. We fought for, and put a lot of resources into trying to protect, The Wilson Forest and The Chanterelle Forest – two amazing mature forests, but they were logged by Sunshine Coast Community Forest Logging Co. (SCCF).
Please note that the last remaining significant mid-elevation forest in this watershed is what we are now calling The Wilson Legacy Forest. This zone provides Roosevelt Elk and Black Bear with a little bit of habitat and connectivity with the nearby Hudson Watershed to the southwest and east to the Elphinstone Forests. The Wilson Legacy Forest is a proposed SCCF Blk EW16 scheduled to be logged some time in 2021- 22 – see their planning map below. Click to Enlarge
For a detailed analysis of the history of logging in the Wilson (complete with aerial photos & maps), along with a critique on various studies used by industry to justify ongoing forest cover removal (logging), go to this link to read Will Koop’s “Withholding Water Science in the Wilson Watershed.” Nov. 23, 2013. https://elf-tr.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/06/Wilson-Creek-Watershed-report-by-Will-Koop.pdf
This view above The Wilson Legacy Forest looks out towards the Salish Sea. Note fresh cutting in the foreground by Surespan, second-growth tree farm in mid-ground, and then the wall of taller trees, which is a mature, older forest that needs protection. Click to Enlarge
Close-up of the taller trees (larger volume) that SCCF is after. Vancouver Island in background and Davis Bay below. This western side of the forest drains into the Hudson Watershed and borders the Chapman Watershed. There is an Elk trail, roughly in the middle of this image, where we have seen a parent group and yearling. Click to Enlarge
The Dakota – Sechelt Forest Service Road (FSR) passes right through the middle (west and east sides) of The Wilson Legacy Forest. ELF has roughed in a trail that loops through both areas. We wonder how people slow down to take a look and say to themselves, “Whoa – an actual forest that we get to drive through. I wonder what it looks like in there?” Click to Enlarge
A peek inside to the west side. The trees aren’t large due to the rocky terrain and poor soil conditions. Estimated to be in the age range of 140-160 years. Old decaying stumps show this area has not been logged before. Limited cedar shake-cutting from downed cedars on the east side. Click to Enlarge
Looking north up the FSR. The only intact mid-elevation forest left in the Wilson Watershed. Click to Enlarge
TAKE ACTION:
If you think this remnant forest should be protected, contact SCCF Operations Manager Dave Lasser at: info1@sccf.ca and inform him that you’re opposed to SCCF logging EW16 (or call it “The Wilson Legacy Forest,” the name we hope the community will start using).
CC: your email to the Mayor & Council at The District of Sechelt – the actual owners of this logging company. Their email is: council@sechelt.ca
Working together as a unified force we will have a better chance of saving this Wilson Watershed from complete devastation.





