The Fairy Creek Blockade - Tales from on the Ground

Andrew Lee • June 24, 2021

Fairy Creek, an Escalating Enviropolitical Battleground

This is mostly a personal account of several visits I made to the Fairy Creek Blockades, followed by a general summary, and resources for finding out more and contributing to the cause.

Early on in 2021 my Facebook news feed began filling up with stories about protesters, calling themselves the Rainforest Flying Squad, making blockades at critical forest road access points to the Fairy Creek watershed, in order to prevent loggers from accessing and logging old growth forests. In April 2021 I drove out to Vancouver Island from Ontario for personal reasons, but within weeks I went to the blockades to visit a friend who had been camped out there for several weeks. Since then I have made four more visits, and have seen the movement grow leaps and bounds.

When I first visited Fairy Creek Headquarters in late April, it consisted of a section of gravel forest road outfitted with an outdoor kitchen, a few small shelters mostly used for storage, one outhouse, and a food trailer. There were anywhere between 10 to 15 people bustling about during the day, with upwards of 30 people showing up to the evening meeting. Seven kilometres up the road was River Camp, a similar sized encampment at a key point accessing the areas to be logged.

I spent the majority of my visits at both Headquarters and River Camp. There were also several camps spread around different entry points to Fairy Creek and other designated logging areas of old growths, such as Caycuse, Eden, 2000, Waterfall and Ridge Camps.

Upon arriving, there was immediately a strong sense of community. Colourful, positive people, coming from all walks of life, brought together for a common cause. I went with a group of them into the forests and, under some mother trees, we meditated and talked about spirituality. Sure, there were serious conversations and lots of action, but at the end of the day, people gathered around fires and sang songs and danced, to keep each other's spirits high. I got the sense that people were drawn here by more than just a love of old growth forests. Many of them might have been drawn here due to a lack of work elsewhere, or lack of direction or connection in their own lives.


Perhaps I'm projecting from my own story. Due to the pandemic, I was lacking work, and I was feeling a lack of connection to society and meaning in my own life. I came out to Vancouver Island to reconnect with an intentional community I was a part of the previous year. It just so happened that the community was only an hour's drive from Fairy Creek. I came back to this community in exchange for farm work, and after my first visit to Fairy Creek I came back more and more often during my days off.


Upon subsequent visits, I found ways I could meaningfully contribute as an occasional visitor. I managed the food supply trailer, which eventually overflowed with donations. I also brought my massage table and offered massage to overworked and injured protesters. Whatever the case for people coming, the community feeling I found here was extremely fulfilling; that feeling of being united for a greater cause than one's own. We gave ourselves code names to protect our identities from police masquerading as protesters. I won't ever know the real names of some of the inspiring people I met, let alone massaged.


In early May, things started heating up politically with the blockades. And as the weather also warmed up, people started coming out in droves to participant in the protests. Having spent the last six years connecting with a web of people in the alternative community on the west coast of Canada, I started seeing lots of friends showing up to the blockades. These old friends combined with new friends made, gave this protest added meaning.


As of this writing in late-June, one old dear friend of mine has been on the front lines for a few months, blocking the loggers, putting themselves in positions to be arrested. Another dear friend has been working 14 hour shifts doing media. A lot of new friends I made went to the front lines to get arrested. Then, it happened to me. I eventually got arrested too... And I have never felt more alive in my life! This story is meant for a blog of its own.


The dedication, hard work, and sacrifice that I see on the ground at Fairy Creek is unbelievably inspiring. And the time spent in this ad hoc community in the forest with no phone reception, has enabled us to connect with nature and with each other on a deeper level. What we are collectively doing here is altering the course of Canadian history. Seeing this movement both on the ground and in social media, and seeing how much it's growing every week, I believe we will drag this fight out and eventually win it, and force a stop to all old growth forest logging in British Columbia.

Timeline


So what is the situation? I will do my best to provide a high level summary, weaving in my own story for context, then offer ways to get involved. 97.3% of forests in British Columbia have been logged, meaning there are only 2.7% old growth forests remaining, trees that are more than 250 years old. These are some of the richest, most productive ecosystems on earth and are irreplaceable.


August 2020 - a few protesters set up the first nonviolent blockade protests in the Fairy Creek watershed, bringing attention to this issue, and blaming British Columbia Premier John Horgan for reneging on his campaign promise to protect old growth forests, allowing logging company Teal Jones to continue logging them. This brave group called themselves the Rainforest Flying Squad


April 2021 - I visited the blockades for the first time, starting with Fairy Creek Headquarters, the base of operations. There were several other camps set up along nearby forest roads blocking access to other old growth areas designated for logging. In late April, Teal Jones was granted an injunction by the court system, so that police could remove protesters. Protesters began to mobilize in preparation for the police


May 2021 - protesters began locking themselves to the road, or up in trees in creative ways, learning from practices carried out during anti-logging protests in Clayaquot in the 80's. The sleeping dragon, for example, is a system where a hole is chiseled out in the middle of the forest road, a heavy duty chain would be put in the hole and concrete poured in to lock the chain in, then people would be handcuffed to the chain. Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) began raiding these blockades and forcibly removing and subsequently arresting protesters


Since the injunction became official, there was a new level of urgency, and the public responded to both this and the warming weather by coming out in droves. On the last weekend of May around 2,000 people showed up to Fairy Creek! Most of them were directed to Waterfall Camp which RCMP forces recently took down, and demonstrated in front of police, showing solidarity with the protesters. First Nations leaders showed up to address the people, and also to hold ceremony and vigils for those arrested

After the influx of public presence and support, Headquarters expanded its infrastructure by building more outhouses, storage structures, and a media tent equipped with satellite internet, with a volunteer team working around the clock to provide up-to-date information, coordinate action, and spread awareness to as many news outlets as possible. The food supply trailer became overwhelmed with food, receiving weeks worth of various foodstuffs from individual donors as well as local suppliers. Donations flowed in in response to calls for supplies such as tents, sleeping bags, socks, even concrete for making sleeping dragons


June 2021 - the Pacheedaht and Dididaht First Nations, indigenous peoples owning the majority of the logging areas in question, came out with joint statements declaring that old growth logging should be deferred for two years, in order to be reassessed. Premier John Horgan, with one less leg to stand on, releases a statement agreeing with the joint statement by the First Nations. However, Horgan's statement is extremely deceptive and redundant. It addresses only logging on First Nations territories, which is largely protected already. By omitting logging areas outside of First Nations almost nothing has changed, and Teal Jones is continuing logging in these old growth areas.


Thus, the fight rages on. From late May into late June there have been over 250 arrests. Waterfall Camp has been raided, taken back by protesters, then raided again - on several occasions! Same goes with Eden Camp and 2000. As summer arrives, more and more protesters will show up. That's exactly what we need - more bodies willing to get arrested, dragging this fight on, while media awareness around this historic protest spreads around the world. Recently 100 prominent Canadians signed an open letter asking Premier John Horgan to stop the logging. Eventually Horgan will be embarrassed out of his pants.


What You Can Do


Show up! The Fairy Creek Headquarters is listed on Google Maps, and is a two-hour drive from Victoria, BC. Your presence is valued, even if you are there just to see the old growth forests with your own eyes. However, if you are keen to do some dirty work, people there will find a way for you to contribute. If you are willing to be arrested, don't worry, first time arrestees typically get released on the same day, with only a charge of "civil contempt of court" which does not result in a criminal record.


Join the Facebook group for the Rainforest Flying Squad. There are thousands of passionate people on here contributing every way possible. Here you can find regular buses offering rides to the blockades, organizing of protests in your local region, petitions to sign, template letters to send to politicians, as well as emails of politicians you can contact.


Check out the Rainforest Flying Squad's official website, Last Stand for Forests. You can donate money to the cause here, which will go to bail money for arrested protesters among other things


Check out the Rainforest Flying Squad's Instagram account for latest news and updates. Share their stories, spread the news to everyone you know. The protesters' battleground is social media. The fight will be won by spreading awareness of the issue, until Premier John Horgan is publicly embarrassed and forced to concede or step down as Premier of British Columbia

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Showing them disagreeable information will only trigger their fight or flight, and potentially start a vicious cycle of arguing. People living in this way carry a narrowed perspective, focusing only on survival, and are thus unable to see the bigger picture. In order to engage with people on the other side of the coin, social media is not the answer because its low quality medium of communication creates further division. What's needed is the exact opposite . The one antidote in a time of such extreme polarization and division is face-to-face conversations with those we disagree with. This is also exactly what is being discouraged by the pandemic. Mask mandates have undermined our ability to see and read facial gestures. Closures of small businesses and gathering places have prevented the opportunities for holding the gatherings and face-to-face conversations needed to bridge this gap. 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However, I choose phone calls and voice messages over texting more and more often these days in general, because my friends and I value the richness of expressing in voice and hearing each other's voices. Polarization is one of the greatest invisible threats to society, preventing people from uniting in action against tangible and urgent threats. It is up to all of us individually to overcome these barriers, through gathering and having face-to-face conversations again, with those we do and do not share views with.
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