Vancouver Sun

Huge waves prompt warnings on Island

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TOFINO Longtime residents of Vancouver Island’s west coast admit to being awestruck by the latest storm that prompted an extreme wave hazard advisory for the region, including Pacific Rim National Park Reserve, Tofino and Ucluelet.

The advisory was issued Thursday as waves up to nine metres high pounded several popular beaches at the same time as midday high tides.

“You’d see people shoulder to shoulder yesterday on the beach that have lived here for 30 years or have been here for 30 minutes, and all of them were ... taken aback and in awe,” said Shane Richards, general manager of the Pacific Sands Beach Resort on Cox Bay near Tofino.

You could feel it, standing 20 feet back from the shoreline, you could feel the waves breaking.

“You could feel it, standing 20 feet back from the shoreline, you could feel the waves breaking,” he said, adding the storm was so powerful that waves were breaking at least two kilometres offshore.

The swells are powerful enough to pick up and hurl huge logs and the advisory from the District of Tofino said rollers were also breaking much higher than usual, flooding beaches and shorelines.

“We’ll have our fair share of cleanup to do,” Richards predicted.

“If I was to guess, I would say there are probably 80 to 90 substantia­lly sized logs on our property that weren’t here yesterday,” he said, describing waves powerful enough to toss one-tonne logs over the retaining wall that protects the property.

A bulletin from Parks Canada, which administer­s the Pacific Rim National Park Reserve, says some beaches and parking lots within the reserve may have to be closed for safety reasons. The warning will remain in effect until today. Weather warnings for the region have been dropped but Environmen­t Canada says winds of up to 60 kilometres per hour were forecast Friday, rising to 80 kilometres by today. The District of Ucluelet also closed beaches and the popular Wild Pacific Trail and said staff were assessing conditions on Friday.

“Beaches, shorelines, docks and marinas, and coastal waters should be avoided during this major storm event,” the district said in a release.

Storm watchers are advised to use safe vantage points including two in Pacific Rim National Park Reserve and one at Amphitrite Point, the most southerly tip of the Ucluelet Peninsula.

The Canadian Press

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