Kiwa Creek

Monday, December 5, 2011

December 5

5C - still dark but was o/c when I went to bed.
M is off to Salmon Arm this am by Westjet, then I'll drive up to Campbell River.

Here is Intro to Fort Nelson story. I'm having a problem with layout sorry. Will work on it later.

Assignment – Fort Nelson

Introduction

         I recently wrote a vignette of one of the Forest Rangers I served under and as I wrote I realized that the year and a half that I spent as his Assistant in Fort Nelson was a bit of an adventure and that I  should include that vignette with an expanded story of the months that I spent headquartered at mile 300 on the Alaska highway.

            The year was 1962, I was at that time an Assistant Forest Ranger stationed in Vanderhoof
            which is the geographical center of British Columbia. I had just passed the entrance exam to
            attend the Forest Service Training School and knew that I would soon be transferred to another
            district. The word came in March that I would be going to Fort St. James so I started moving
            some of our belongings to the residence we would occupy and then took a week off to take an
            Easter time holiday. When I got back ten days later there was a letter on my desk saying that
            instead of Fort St. James I would be going to Fort Nelson.

            I was actually quite pleased with the change as to that point in time I hadn’t spent any time in
            the far north.


            Since our furniture and other belongings were now divided between two houses about fifty
            miles apart, I prevailed on the headquarters warehouse in Prince George to store everything
            while I regrouped. In those days a canvas covered gravel truck was made available for moving.
            Once everything was packed and gathered together I left with my family from Vanderhoof and  
            headed to Fort St. John which was where the Ranger District headquarters was. In those days it
            was almost an eleven hour drive and we finally checked into a motel about ten that night.

           To appreciate the Fort St. John Ranger District, I will attempt to create a picture of the
           geography of the district which should put into some perspective the magnitude of managing
           and supervising the area.
           The headquarters as the name indicates was at Fort St. John, mile 47 on the Alaska Highway.
           The District was a large wedge shape that started at the Alberta border east of Taylor, ran north
           for two hundred and forty miles to the North West Territories boundary then west along that
           boundary and the Yukon boundary for about two hundred and fifty miles then south east along
           the Kechika and Finlay rivers and then Easterly back to Taylor. The westerly edge(one third) of
           the district was the northern extension of the Rocky Mountains and the eastern two thirds was
           muskeg in the north and rolling grasslands in the south.

           The district was dissected by the Alaska highway and included outposts at Wonowon (year
            round), Fort Nelson (mile 300)(six months per year), Muncho Lake(Mile 452)(five months per
            year) and Lower Post (Mile  620)(six months per year). There was one Assistant appointed to
           each of the out posts prior to 1963. There were also Fire Lookout towers at Pink Mountain,
           Prophet River and Fort Nelson.

            In 1963 Lower Post was split off and put under the jurisdiction of the Prince Rupert Forest
            Region.

            The highway itself was paved as far as the town of Wonowon and the remaining Canadian
            portion was gravel.

            To help manage this vast area, the Ranger had a Deputy Ranger, two Assistant Rangers and a
            dispatcher in Fort St. John. Strangely enough although the six month appointments to Fort
            Nelson and Lower Post were always experienced, the five month appointment to Muncho Lake
            was always a new hiree.


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