“to have that desecrated was like ripping out a piece of my heart. it is gut wrenching. i couldn’t believe it.”
rees said an elder told him the log had 880 rings and was centuries old. it had most likely washed ashore in the early 1960s when there was significant logging of old-growth in b.c.
“it’s a huge tragedy,” said vancouver park board commissioner tom digby.
digby called it a piece of iconic natural art, “thrown up by a mix of environment and industry,” and a valuable reminder of how settlers moved on indigenous land.
“it’s an example of how we misused old-growth forests. we could look at it and ask, how could we kill this massive cedar tree? how could we abandon it in the ocean? how did it wash up randomly at a place like this?”
handout photo of the damage done by a log to the seawall at trafalgar beach in vancouver
amit gandha
/
vancouver parks board
when digby heard the log was being cut up, he reached out to board chair laura christensen.
“i said, ‘you’ve got to stop this,'” he recalled.
it was too late. nor was it within the authority of elected commissioners.
actions related to public safety are made independently by staff.
“operations made the decision,” said digby.
amit gandha, director of park operations, said the log came to the attention of staff last week during a routine examination of the retaining wall at the foot of the stairs leading to the beach from trafalgar street and point grey road.