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travel / travel magazine / march 2008

Live & Learn

Into the lair of the white bear (page 2)

Striking out into the wilderness, I inhaled air filtered by millions of conifers — 1,000-year-old red cedar, western hemlock, Sitka spruce. A humpback whale raced along the coastline, thumping its enormous tail. Four caramel-coloured sea lions cavorted in the waters near shore. That night, a storm hit, lashing our vessel. Secure in my bunk in the wheelhouse, I dreamt of looking for a place I could not find. As dawn forced its way through the morning mist, I awoke to discover that we had anchored in a protected bay next to the rusted hull of a century-old shipwreck. A reminder that for every island we pass, more lurk just below the surface.


AFTER BREAKFAST, primed with steaming mugs of fair-trade organic coffee, we board two inflatable Zodiacs and zip into Mussel Inlet, where we immediately see signs of what our onboard naturalist, Alison Watt, calls the “divine, spectacularly mortal salmon,” a line from Canadian poet Don McKay. In Bella Bella, the fishing boats sit idle, hard hit by the decline in salmon stocks. Out here, where the unruly Pacific laps up against the mouths of rivers, some of these spectacularly mortal beings still live out their primordial drama, growing snouts and fangs in a Jekyll-to-Hyde transformation as they fight their way to a redemptive death.



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This place, explains Watt, should really be called the Great Salmon Rainforest. Salmon are the foundational species that supports bears, wolves, minks, eagles, ravens, all the way down to what she calls the “non-charismatic microfauna,” a sly comment that exposes how obsessed we humans are with the big and beautiful animals when the tiny and ignored are just as essential. None matter more, though, than the salmon that have journeyed to spawn and then die in the rivers where they were born. Carried deep into the woods by all manner of creatures, their bodies fertilize the soil with nitrogen, creating growth bursts in trees, which in turn protect the rivers and the salmon from runoff.

One snouted beast on the river’s edge has had his juicy eye plucked out by an eagle or a raven or one of the thousands of dovelike mew gulls that breed in Alaska and pause here on their migration south. Others, half gutted, indicate the presence of bears.

As we trudge through the sedges in rain gear, a black grizzly rears up from the shoreline, its cavernous mouth chewing silverweed root, its back a great muscular hump. A ways off, a tawny-coloured grizzly mother and her nearly weaned cub are sharing a salmon.

As wilderness disappears, so do the grizzlies, but that is not the only risk to their survival. In a month or two, says our captain, bear viewing will turn to the licensed bear hunt. This grizzly mother and cub, part of a declining population that has already disappeared from 99 percent of its habitat in the United States and most of southern British Columbia, will be seen through a rifle scope rather than a camera lens.

For now, they barrel awkwardly into the water for a fresh catch.

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