View this email in your browser
IN THIS EMAIL
  • Big tree hunters: saving the last untouched areas of the planet
  • Diving Newfoundland’s World War Two wrecks with Jill Heinerth
  • Wildlife Wednesday: study finds California sea lions are getting bigger
  • Author John Vaillant on his new book Fire Weather — and the toxic relationship between fire and petroleum
  • An Ocean Quest Adventures trip in Newfoundland
Big tree hunters: saving the last untouched areas of the planet
How a niche British Columbia-based community is working to bring attention to the importance of old-growth forests

By Madigan Cotterill
Conservation photographer TJ Watt stands amongst a grove of giant cedars along the shore of Cheewhat Lake in the Pacific Rim National Park Reserve in Ditidaht Territory on Vancouver Island, BC. (Photo: TJ Watt – Ancient Forest Alliance)

Amanda Lewis stands completely alone on the edge of British Columbia’s Stewart-Cassiar Highway, contemplating her next step as she confronts a wall of dense, dark trees. Will she venture into the woods unaccompanied, potentially risking her life to reach her destination? Or will she decide to wait for the company of others, knowing there is safety in numbers?

It’s a cloudy summer day, and Lewis is searching for one of Canada’s largest trees, a subalpine fir initially located in 1987. It is already late in the day, and it would take Lewis at least 30 minutes of trekking through the bush to reach the tree. An occasional car passes her on the highway — the only sign of human life as she debates her next move.

Keep reading
EXPLORE PODCAST: 
Diving Newfoundland’s World War Two wrecks with Jill Heinerth
RCGS Explorer-in-Residence Jill Heinerth discusses the discovery of a Second World War-era bomber 50 metres below the surface in Gander Lake, Newfoundland
Jill Heinerth and Rick Stanley with the RCGS flag. (Photo: Robert McClellan)

In her Great Island Expedition, RCGS Explorer-in-Residence Jill Heinerth and her team went to raise the voices of lives, ships and an aircraft lost during the Second World War from the waters in and around Newfoundland.

When we last had Jill Heinerth on the podcast, one of the stories she shared as she prepared for this diving expedition was about Lanier Phillips, an African-American mess attendant on a US Navy ship that sank off the coast of Newfoundland during the Second World War. Back then, African-Americans like Lanier Philips could only work the lowest jobs in the racially segregated US Navy. And they were warned by officers that if they ever went ashore anywhere, they’d be lynched by locals. With his ship going down in harsh winter seas off of southern Newfoundland, Lanier Philips convinced his fellow attendants that the risk of lynching was better than almost certain death on a sinking ship. What followed would change his life. On her Great Island Expedition, Jill and her team dove to the wreck of the ship Lanier Philips escaped from, among many other second world war dive sites.

Listen and subscribe
Wildlife Wednesday: study finds California sea lions are getting bigger

Plus: juvenile salmon migration timing is changing, candy-striped spiders are catching big prey and $500,000 worth of baby eels seized in Enfield, N.S.

By Tori Fitzpatrick

Male California sea lions are becoming bigger and better fighters as their populations grow. (Photo: Gabriel Tovar/Unsplash)

From nose to tail, an adult male California sea lion is about eight feet long and can weigh up to 1,000 pounds. However a new study from the University of California Santa Cruz has found that as California sea lion  populations have grown, the males are also increasing in size and becoming stronger fighters.. This finding contradicts the trends seen in other marine mammals who typically decrease in body size as their populations grow. 

Since the Marine Mammal Protection Act was passed in the U.S. in 1972, there has been a notable increase in California sea lion population size, which is currently estimated to be about 300,000 animals along the Pacific coast..Researchers found that male California sea lions — found in the waters of the eastern North Pacific Ocean from Alaska to central Mexico — are becoming larger as their populations grow, while females have remained at a consistent body size. Males also increased their biting force and neck flexibility, making them better fighters. 

Keep reading
Our new “century of fire”
Author John Vaillant on his new book Fire Weather — and the toxic relationship between fire and petroleum

By Paloma Pacheco
A wildfire near Highway 63 in south Fort McMurray. (Photo: CC BY-SA 4.0)

In the early days of May 2016, the city of Fort McMurray, in northern Alberta’s subarctic boreal forest, was on fire. As temperatures rise and the winter snowpack starts to melt, wildfire season can kick off as early as spring in the province. But this was no ordinary fire. Gaining traction and power in a matter of hours, the fire overtook the entire city, forcing nearly 100,000 people to evacuate as their houses, cars, possessions and livelihoods burned to the ground before their eyes. The single costliest environmental disaster in Canada’s history, the fire was a frightening example of what B.C.-based journalist and author John Vaillant calls our new “century of fire.”

In his latest book, Fire Weather: The Making of a Beast, Vaillant argues that our obsession with petroleum and fossil fuel extraction has led to a deadly new 21st century reality ruled by fire — in a form we have not previously experienced. As climate change has given rise to a world governed by hotter, drier conditions, human life and the natural environment are increasingly at the mercy of the elements. Focusing on the Fort McMurray catastrophe as an example of the fateful dynamic between intensified fires and resource extraction, Vaillant digs deep into the events of May 2016 to expose the true costs of this relationship. With Alberta experiencing another devastating wildfire season, and B.C. in the midst of a record-breaking spring heatwave, Vaillant spoke with Canadian Geographic about his book’s relevance.

Keep reading
TRAVEL WITH CANADIAN GEOGRAPHIC 
Featured trip: Consummate Explorer Package

Join Rick and Johnny O, Fellows of the Royal Canadian Geographical Society and expedition leaders, on the Consummate Explorer package with Ocean Quest Adventures. Staged at Ocean Quest Lodge, guests are immersed in a week full of activities, culture, true Newfoundland hospitality and the highlights of 

Newfoundland coastal living. The trip starts with an Ocean Safari which may include icebergs, whales, cod fishing and dinner prepared by a local chef, and progresses to include kayaking, a local tour to either the world famous Bell Island Mines or the South Dildo Whaling & Sealing Museum, local musical entertainment and snorkelling. At the end of each fun-filled day, we regroup at Ocean Quest Lodge to debrief, share stories and revel in the joy of Newfoundland’s musical entertainment.

Meet your ambassador: Rick Stanley

Learn more
Get inspired!
Photos: The wild, wonderful landscapes of western Newfoundland

Photographer Jenny Wong reveals Newfoundland’s jaw-dropping scenery on an adventure with Great Canadian Trails

Photography by Jenny Wong

Check out these other upcoming trips:

- Canadian Badlands and Rocky Mountains with George Kourounis
Alaska Supervoyage with Jenny Wong

- Heli-hiking in the Cariboos with Robin Esrock

Sent this email by a friend? Subscribe to our newsletters and stay up to date with everything happening at Canadian Geographic
Subscribe
CONNECT WITH US ON SOCIAL! #SHARECANGEO
Facebook
Twitter
Instagram
CANADIAN GEOGRAPHIC THANKS OUR ADVERTISERS. BECOME ONE
Copyright © 2023 Canadian Geographic, All rights reserved.
You are receiving this email because you opted in via our website.

Our mailing address is:
Canadian Geographic
50 Sussex Drive
Ottawa, ON K1M2K1
Canada

Add us to your address book


Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list.

Email Marketing Powered by Mailchimp