Selective logger Merve Wilkinson, 86, has been dubbed the Moses of North American eco-forestry. He has selectively logged his 136-acre lot near Ladysmith nine times since 1939, never diminishing the amount of trees on his Wildwood property for 50 years. "Walk into it today and it is like walking into one of nature's cathedrals."; Jane Goodall wrote in 1999, "...You see it can be done.";

Despite his age, Wilkinson joined the anti-logging protests at Clayoquot and was willing to risk prison for his beliefs. Goody Niosi's Magnificently Unrepentant (Heritage $19.95) is so-named because that's the term a B.C. judge used to respectfully describe Wilkinson in 1999. Her profile of Wilkinson cites his roles as activist and educator.

Wilkinson has been unrepentantly consistent in his efforts to encourage intelligent forestry. "When I started to study forestry in the 1930's,"; he says, "much was known about a 'tree' but little about a 'forest'."; Since then he has remained true to a magnificently simple approach to harvesting his trees: don't cut more than the growth rate.

Wilkinson, a recent Order of British Columbia recipient, quips that the corporate understanding of interrelatedness "is simply the growth of profits interrelating with the economic well-being of the stockholders."; He believes clear-cutting methods overlook the importance of ecological balance.

Merve's grandfather, Robert Wilkinson, emigrated to Canada in 1889 after he was blacklisted from working in the mines of England. Wilkinson, also a Methodist lay minister, had advocated getting children under the age of twelve out of the mines. He also lobbied for a ten-hour workday and a six-day workweek. Bob Wilkinson was labeled a communist and was proud of it. "The communist of today is the conservative of tomorrow,"; he said.

Merve's father, William Wilkinson, met his mother, Christina McOuat, in Cumberland. When he was born in 1913, he weighed twelve pounds. Neither Christina Wilkinson or her husband wanted to undergo the birthing process again, so Merve grew up as an only child.

A portion of the proceeds from Magnificently Unrepentant will go toward the B.C. Land Conservancy program to acquire his Wildwood forest and establish an Eco-forestry education centre there. "In speaking out against current industrial clearcut logging practices,"; says Dr. David Suzuki, "Merve has become a genuine Canadian hero. Uncompromising, tough, fearless, with a wonderful sense of humour, he is now an elder who inspires young people who refer to his home as Mervana.";

Wilkinson married his third wife, Raging Granny Anne Pask, after she toured his woodlot in 1989. As a 'kindred rebel', Wilkinson refrained from asking for a senior's discount on the marriage license. 1-894383-32-6

[BCBW Autumn 2001]