Vancouver Sun

Timber thieves behind rash of felled firs on the Island

Thieves often use moss to cover up freshly cut stumps and sawdust

- SUSAN LAZARUK

Magnificen­t trees that are hundreds of years old are being poached by timber thieves, sometimes just to turn a quick buck by reducing old-growth Douglas fir to firewood.

B.C.’s natural resource officers are always on the lookout for poachers, but are also asking the public to report any suspicious activities they witness while hiking or riding on Crown land.

Timber poachers are becoming more of a problem on Vancouver Island, where they enter Crown land under the cover of darkness and chop down old-growth trees.

“We’ve seen a real surge of blatant timber theft across Vancouver over the last couple of years,” said Luke Clarke, a natural resource enforcemen­t officer with the Forests, Lands, Natural Resource Operations and Rural Developmen­t Ministry.

He said the thieves are targeting commercial-grade timber and cutting down the trees, sometimes unsafely, to sell it to unscrupulo­us mills or unsuspecti­ng individual­s.

“They see a product that’s valuable and which belongs to the public and they’re taking it,” he said.

He said he and his fellow officers on patrol are seeing more and more evidence of illegal harvesting of trees, especially Douglas fir, red cedar and bigleaf maple.

“They’re working in groups,” Clarke said. “They ’re cutting down trees and then coming to collect them later.”

The thieves often cover telltale freshly cut stumps and sawdust with moss to cover their tracks.

Clarke said legitimate loggers practise forest practices that leave old-growth trees behind in strategic locations to provide a buffer next to bodies of water and to maintain an ecosystem for wildlife and other plant growth, only to have poachers fell them.

Some thieves are simply trying to turn a fast buck selling firewood.

Others are looking for large boards popular for custom-made dining room tables or hoping to capitalize on rising prices for certain woods by supplying mills. Bigleaf maple is popular for making guitars and other musical instrument­s.

Clarke said natural resource officers patrol Crown lands around the clock looking for timber poachers, along with their many other duties, but can’t be everywhere at once.

“We rely on members of the public to be our eyes and ears and when they’re recreating and see anything suspicious, if they see someone harvesting a tree that shouldn’t be harvested,” he urged them to call the tips hotline, at 877-952-7277, or #7277 on most cellphone networks.

The compliance and enforcemen­t branch is investigat­ing a number of timber-poaching cases at the moment, said Clarke. It works with the RCMP to build a case to charge poachers by using modern technologi­cal forensic techniques, like matching up growth rings and saw marks, to trace timber to its source.

Figures on charges or conviction­s for poaching weren’t immediatel­y available from the forestry ministry.

 ?? B.C. FORESTS MINISTRY COMPLIANCE AND ENFORCEMEN­T ?? Natural resource officer Denise Blid investigat­es and posts a seizure notice on timber Wednesday that was cut without authority on Crown land on Vancouver Island. Thieves’ favourite targets are Douglas fir, red cedar and bigleaf maple.
B.C. FORESTS MINISTRY COMPLIANCE AND ENFORCEMEN­T Natural resource officer Denise Blid investigat­es and posts a seizure notice on timber Wednesday that was cut without authority on Crown land on Vancouver Island. Thieves’ favourite targets are Douglas fir, red cedar and bigleaf maple.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada