Growth in the Walbran's Shadow

My phone buzzed at 10:25pm on a Monday night a month ago. New unread text.

“Clear your schedule Wednesday, we’re going to the Walbran” - Will.

My heart sunk and my nerves started to rattle. I didn’t know if I wanted to do this.

After a summer of guiding, I had flown to Victoria for a couple weeks to hang out with my folks, play a show with my Dad and go backpacking with a few friends. The Walbran Valley, a mystical ancient forest of gigantic cedars, was not on my radar but heavy on my mind. There had been time when the Walbran had been an obsession but a lot had changed since. Back then, I was either in the Walbran, on my way there, or exhausted, covered in mud and heading back to Victoria for more supplies.

For four years in my late twenties my life was dominated by this valley. Everything I did was totally devoted to being in the ‘Bran'. I wanted to help build and maintain the trail network, find its hidden big trees, and bring awareness to this incredible ecosystem that was in danger of being logged. It was a time in my life when I had huge chunks of time off between band tours with my trumpet and minimal expenses. I had moved back into my parent’s basement and, maybe because of that, had a burning need to prove something to myself and the world.

I started this trail building adventure with no real experience and no idea what I was doing. For the first few weeks, I was using a rock as a hammer, a little bow saw to cut through blocks, and a little hatchet that would take hours to cut through anything. It was hard and very slow work. One day, on a cold November day about 6-7 days into a 13 day trail building trip, I was working on opening an old overgrown access trail. It hadn’t stopped torrentially raining in days, everything was soaked, and I was sharing a leaky tent with my ex-girlfriend. Back then, I was willing to overlook any tempestuous and virulent interpersonal conflicts if it meant I had someone to help me go trailbuiliding (aka a truck to borrow). As we were clearing six foot tall Salal bushes and not talking to each other (we were… ahem… in an argument), this tall guy sauntered up our cleared path and introduced himself as Will. I didn’t realize it then, but my life had just changed course in a big way.

Will at a work site.

Will gave me the opportunity to take my trailbuilding passion to the next level. He too had large amounts of time off in winter, had access to his parent’s truck, owned multiple chainsaws and most importantly also shared this raging inner fire demanding he prove himself. Over the next four years, Will and I would work tirelessly and relentlessly in the awfully wet and cold months of winter to replace most of the boardwalks, open new trails, and photograph our work and promote the Walbran Valley through my blog and our pseudo-organization the Coastal Trail Collective. At our peak, we would drive out for 4-7 days at a time burning through 50 pound boxes of nails a day building boardwalk. We would drive back to Victoria, grab more nails, tofurkey dogs and coffee before turning around and heading right back. When I was burnt out and exhausted, Will’s boundless energy would carry my complaining butt onto the next trip. I would begrudgingly follow him into the bush and his 5th sense at finding big trees would bring us into the most beautiful and stunning groves of trees with trunks that would exceed 50+ feet in circumference. I would then watch in awe as his incredible woodworking skills would conjure up boardwalk trails out of thin air.

Drying out in the tent.

The Crown Jewel Grove

One time a giant tree fell across the FSR on our way home on a 50+mm rain day. It took 4 hours to cut a gap big enough for my car to drive through, but it ripped the muffler off. Here’s Will trying to fix it.

Will

Those years contained so many stories, emotions and adventures that it’s hard to coherently put it all down on paper. How do you describe the helicopters with their giant claws plucking trees from the ground, the war like sounds of the road blasting crew, the early blockades made of equal parts passion, disorganization, bravery and mould, the rain that would flood everything and lift entire trees into the river, the trill of using a chainsaw to create beautiful boardwalks, big timber and its flawless grain and inebriating smell, the euphoria of completing a new trail in impassable jungle, the rage of seeing new clearcuts and the trees you loved pilled high on the road, the pain and exhaustion of working your body raw, and the sweet victory of opening a bag of chips on the drive out.

Walbran trailbuilding with Will was my life for years and became a pillar of who I am today. It transformed me and steered me towards a career in outdoor education and commercial guiding, my partner Emma, and a life that now focuses on living, working and playing outside.

Life took its turns and I started moving around BC in my early thirties before finally settling up north in the Yukon. The north was a refuge for me from the dark side of BC’s old growth forests. The more time I spent exploring Vancouver Island, the more I found it upsetting that our forests were disappearing from wanton forestry practices. Climb any mountain and you’ll see roads and clearcuts. You simply cannot go anywhere without seeing the effects of logging. At least the Yukon, with its spindly trees and bare alpine lands, hides its environmental carnage. There is no forestry up here and the mines occupy a tiny fraction of the landscape. The damage is just as bad, but at least I can’t see it. I know, it’s hypocritical and an awful way of looking at things but I just couldn’t continue staring at the wounds of logging any longer.

Moving to the north felt like a betrayal to the valley I had sworn to protect. I was in Whitehorse when Will started a movement at Fairy creek. I was not there when the RCMP beat up non-violent forest defenders, I didn’t protest in front of the legislature, and I watched from afar when the logging trucks drove up the road. I felt like an armchair environmentalist who told embellished stories about that time I spent in the woods, clawing for relevance when others were sacrificing everything for the trees. It was a hard pill to swallow thinking that my Walbran chapter had passed.

Since then, whenever I was visiting Vancouver Island the Walbran would feel like a dark shadow. The enduring, life changing impacts the valley had had on me now filled my mind with a mix of pride, shame and confusion. I hadn’t figured out how to reconnect with the rainforest and I wanted to avoid it.

SO ANYWAY! Will texts and says we’re going to the Walbran, in a day, on an epic mission and I kind of freak out. I was not mentally ready for this. Was I even in shape enough to keep up? I see Will as a bit of a superhuman and in my prime always struggled to keep up with him. Now, with some slow guide legs, could I even think of following him into the rainforest? What about the Walbran? Would I feel the same sense of attachment, or just guilt and shame.

I tried pushing down the stress and anxiety brewing in my mind as I reluctantly told Will I was onboard and game for and an adventure. It was going to be a massive day trip with 7 hours of driving and who knows how many hours tromping through the forest and wading down the river in wetsuits. Bring a headlamp he said.

In the end the trip didn’t happen. Our ride to the Walbran bailed and instead Will, his friend Maddy and I went for a leisurely drive to Port Renfrew. We brushed out some new boardwalk in Jurassic Grove, discovered a cool limestone cave far up a logging road, and bushwacked some flagged cut blocks to find some really big Doug Firs.

It was an easy, enjoyable adventure on a beautiful fall day. It felt like the first step towards reconnecting with the forests of Vancouver Island.

I still don’t know where I stand and how I feel, but next time I’ll go figure that out in the Walbran.

Confessions of a Tired Hiking Guide

A cold morning foot bath. WCT/Pacheedaht Territory

Sort through paperwork, email guests, call the hotels and helicopters, check the weather, run to Superstore for groceries, pack food, check group gear, frantically pack my backpack and drive off to the wilderness with a bunch of anxious guests. Come home late eight to ten days later, unpack and clean gross gear, check emails and missed phone calls, slump on the couch for a few hours of youtube, and repeat.

Blow Hole, WCT/Ditidaht Territory

Sea Stack, WCT/Ditidaht Territory

Cold, Rainy Fire, WCT/Huu-ay-aht Territory

My summer came and went with a furious blast of back-to-back to back trips with very little time off in-between that left me on the brink of burning out. I started with a West Coast Trail that brought thigh deep water crossings in the surf, 60+ pound packs, a couple 18-hour work days and a 50km detour by boat to try to find our food drop. After finishing the trip and flying home, I had a few days to plan a Yukon River trip that seemed doomed from the start.

The wildfire situation had closed the highway to Dawson and the melting snow pack was leading to high water levels on the river and flooding in many Yukon communities. Hoping for the best, we left downtown Whitehorse paddling north in six canoes. Unfortunately, our luck didn’t last long and within a few hours, we faced a river blockage caused by 17 boy scout canoes, followed by unrelenting torrential rain for three days and 2-4’ waves that threatened to swamp our boats.

Somehow, we managed to get to Carmacks nine days later without losing any boats or people, but by the time I got home, it was barely a month into my season and I wasn’t sure I could keep going.

Ddhäl Ch’èl Cha Nän - Ragged Mountain Land
— Hän Language, Trʼondëk Hwëchʼin First Nation

Hanging on by a thread, I transitioned out of the canoe and into my hiking boots and headed north to Ddhäl Ch'èl Cha Nän. Over the course of four trips in Tombstone Territorial Park with the support of my amazing co-guides Nat, Étienne and Kate, my energy slowly returned. While the breathtaking views of the mountains never ceased to amaze me, it was the relentless wind, the daily extreme weather shifts and constantly transforming landscape that seemed to refill my lost energy reserves. To see the land change from hills carpeted in wildflowers radiating every colour imaginable to snowcapped mountains draped in fiery reds, oranges and yellows, it reminded me why I love guiding and why I want to continue bringing people out onto the land.

Ddhäl Ch'èl Cha Nän / Trʼondëk Hwëchʼin First Nation

For me, guiding is two sides of a ruthless coin. One side is an opportunity to viscerally experience the land and to master skills that let you safely and comfortably bring others along with you. The other side is a brutal, three-month schedule that makes it incredibly difficult to do anything else, and strains important relationships as well as your ability to take care of yourself.

I’m still curious about this guiding thing and I want to see how far I can go with it. This year has taught me that without a good work/life balance everything can collapse but I’m determined to try anyway. I want to make guiding sustainable environmentally, ethically, but most importantly personally. Let’s see what happens.

Springtime News

Yukon spring

Spring is finally here in the Yukon! Another winter has passed, the snow is melting, and the infinitely long days have arrived.

April kicked off with a spectacular concert at the Heart of Riverdale. I got to plan an entire concert of new music in a theatre that was packed to the brim with people! I was a little emotional at times to be finally creating real live music after so many years of putting off concerts.

Skagway

I then ditched the trumpet to get some spring skiing in, ripped to Penticton for 5 days of great climbing, and hosted a few visiting friends from down south.

I wanted to give them a jam packed Yukon experience so we took them to Skagway, led them on a little backcountry touring excursion and showed them my favourite local spots. It was a great week that culminated in the Funk Is Tight, a Price is Right tribute game/show hosted by local legends Major Funk. Emma got called up and raked it in with her superb knowledge of Superstore prices.

White Pass

Upcoming Fun Stuff

Newsletter Drop

Newsletter vol 3: The Great Olivier Newsletter vol. 3 is coming out this week! I’ll be talking about how to get the best results out of your dehydrator, some backcountry planning tips, and a hearty peanut stew recipe. Sign up now to get it delivered to your inbox!

Upcoming shows

I’ll be playing in Dawson City on May 27th. The day’s going to start with a show at the pavilion from 12-1pm with my quintet ensemble. Afterwards, I’ll be playing with Lorène Charmetant’s jazz group at the KIAC Ballroom at 8pm. Get all the details here.

April 1st - FINALLY A LIVE SHOW!!!!!!

I did it!!!! I survived two years of no performances without quitting music, and now we’re doing it live, in person, and jazz raging!!!!!!

On Friday April 1st, I’ll be performing the new music I composed during my Jenni House Residency inside the black box theatre at the Heart of Riverdale. Oh man…. I need this real bad…. I think I know how to still play in front of an audience?! The show’s going to feature Andy Slade on piano, Toby Moisey on alto flute, Adrian Burrill on trumpet and flugelhorn, Lorène Charmetant on upright bass, and Lonnie Powell on drums and percussion.

There’s going to lots of friends, drinks will be available, and man oh man do I want to jazz party hard.

Hope to see you there!!!

The Great Olivier Newsletter Vol. 1

Hello everyone!

Well, after humming and hawing for a while about if this was a good idea or not, I’ve sent off into the ether my very first newsletter.

I’m experimenting with this newsletter idea because I’m pretty frustrated trying to communicate with friends/fans through ye old traditional social media websites and getting blocked by algorithm bs. If I want to send a message about a new song, concert or project, facebook and instagram will deliberately limit its reach until I pay promo money. It sucks..

I’m challenging myself to follow through with this idea for at least a year and let’s see how it goes. Check out the first edition and see what you think. It’s got some fun commentary on spotify, a really tasty recipe for powerball snacks, and step by step how-to instructions on building a quinzhee shelter (surprise, it’s a totally unique technique).

In other news, “Dogs For Emma” is now available on most streaming platforms. Find a link to your favourite streaming service here.