Huddersfield Daily Examiner

Tr avel report CANADA W THE FREE BEARS

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BRITISH health spa pioneer Champneys, which began as a health farm in 1925, is heading out to sea in partnershi­p with the UK’s third largest cruise line, Marella Cruises.

Marella Explorer, the fleet’s latest and biggest ship will be making its maiden voyage in May.

The state-of-the-art spa’s new floating residence will offer a full menu of Champney treatments, plus an exclusive treatment available only on board the new ship.

A seven-night Paradise Islands cruise to the Caribbean on Marella Explorer will sail from Barbados on December 9, 2018, calling at Antigua, St Maarten, British Virgin Islands, St Kitts and Bequia and the Grenadines.

Fares start at £1,256 per person including Gatwick flights, transfers, tips and service charges. Visit tui.co.uk/cruise, 0871 230 2800. ADING through waist-height devil’s club shrubs with leaves the size of dinner plates, I feel like a shrinking Alice in Wonderland. Everything around me is enormous.

Towering until they almost block out the sky, colossal cedars and hemlocks create a comforting sanctuary, securely grounded by their ancient roots.

For a relatively young country celebratin­g 150 years since Confederat­ion this year, these 400-year-old beauties are treasured historical monuments.

In Canada, everything is supersized: distances are vast, forests are endless, and wildlife is wonderfull­y abundant. It’s a scale almost incomprehe­nsible to someone from a small European island which could probably fit neatly into the pocket of west coast province British Columbia.

And if the sights are big, the sounds are even bigger: The grumbling of a sorehead sleeping grizzly disturbed from his slumber echoes around the forest canopy like a rumbling storm about to break.

Frozen to the spot, his eyes darting wildly, Gary Zorn shhs a wrinkled index finger to his appropriat­ely ghost-white beard.

A seasoned guide, with 40 years’ experience trekking bears in this area, he’s not afraid, he’s simply listening and anticipati­ng what the grumpy grizzly metres away from us might do next.

Originally a tracker for hunters, 71-year-old Gary is a master of bear behaviour, but early on he made the decision to swap guiding guns for leading wildlife tours, and is one of British Columbia’s true pioneers.

On November 30, the trophy hunting of grizzly bears was banned in the province, a decision welcomed by many and supported by the economic growth of nature tourism, proof these animals are worth far more alive than dead.

“Hunting was becoming a dirty word,” explains Gary on his initial decision to change tack. “But when I told friends ecotourism was the way forward, they laughed at me.”

Firmly resolute, he carried on and was granted the wildlife guiding permit 001, the first to be issued in the province.

Based at Pyna-tee-ah lodge at the base of the Cariboo Mountains, deep inside BC, he runs Ecotours BC with his wife Peggy, operating almost exclusivel­y in an area the size of Switzerlan­d. Combining boat trips along salmon-filled rivers, active treks through subAlpine forest and even (on occasion) heli-hikes to peaks above the clouds, he promises wild, intimate but always respectful encounters, deservedly earning him the moniker ‘Bear Whisperer’ – a title he’s trademarke­d.

A cloak of foggy drizzle sweeps across the Mitchell River, a tributary of the Quesnel, on our first outing, an 80km speedboat ride from the lodge. Birds of prey swoosh through webs of mist netting the tips of fir trees and beads of rain hang from garlands of lichen like jewels.

Next summer, Gary plans to launch an ambitious glamping site in this remote, peak-fringed wilderness, with smart safari-style tents pitched on a floating platform. Dawn and dusk brown bear viewing will be possible, with days spent exploring caves by kayak and hiking through ancient forest.

Thousands of sockeye salmon return here from September to October, firing upstream like silver bullets until they mutate into plump, green-gilled, devil-red monsters, travelling from the Pacific Ocean before spawning and dying in the place they were born.

They’re a bedrock in the food chain and provide a particular­ly tasty meal for bears.

Wearing waders almost up to my chin, I climb over a chaos of toppled trees and decrepit branches, squelching salmon carcasses underfoot. Dragged by bears from the water, their nutrients are responsibl­e for the forest’s epic growth spurts; salmon DNA has even been found in cedar trees.

Gary ushers our group of four (the maximum number of guests per outing) to a log jam on the water’s edge, and sitting with our legs dangling in the aquariumcl­ear stream, we wait.

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