News
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January 15, 2012
2012 Training Courses:
Guide Training Courses to get you safely on the water! More...
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October 18, 2011
2011 Annual General Meeting:
Wednesday, November 9th, 2011, Nanaimo, BC. Minutes available in the Members Area More...
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October 15, 2011
2011 Fall Exchange:
September 30 - October 2, 2011 - Tofino, BC
Photos now posted!
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Fall Guide Exams - 2011
Level Two and Three Exam dates now posted More...
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July 1, 2011
Wolf Advisory: Vargas Island Park - Clayoquot Sound
Due to wolf activity on Vargas Island this spring, BC Parks has issued a Wolf Advisory More...
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June 29, 2011
Postal Disruption Over:
Mail is moving again, but submission of documents and payments can still be made online! More...
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May 27, 2011
2011 Spring Exam Dates:
UPDATE: New L2 exam now posted! Level Two and Three exam dates posted More...
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May 3, 2011
2011 Spring Exchange:
Photos from this great event now posted!More...
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March 17, 2011
Transport Canada Kayak Registration:
UPDATE
Interim suspension of Commercial Kayak Registration SUSPENDED. Read MORE
- Kayak Registration
- Vessel Requirements
- SKGABC Letter to Minister of Transport
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Dec 1, 2010
Lightsation De-Staffing:
SKGABC Presentation to Senate Committee of Fisheries and Oceans. Summary available here
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2010 Fall Exchanges:
Porteau Cove / Deep Cove Canoe & Kayak Photos NOW Posted!!!
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2010 Spring Exam Dates:
Level Two and Three exam dates posted here
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2010 Spring Guides Exchange:
Salt Spring Island, BC. Hosted by Island Excapades Click Here for more details Attend for the chance to win a Werner Performance Core Paddle!
- Technical Guides Manual
The SKGABC has produced a manual for guides of every level. For more information Click Here
- Sea Kayaking BC Study
The SKGABC and Tourism BC teamed up with Malaspina to create an extensive study on the sea kayaking sector in BC. Please log into the members section to access the full report.
For older news, please click here
If you have a question about the SKGABC, please contact us!
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SKGABC Low Impact Best Practices
Listed below are the seven basic principles of “Leave no Trace” along with the
SKGABC’s best practices for each principle. View in PDF
- Plan Ahead and Prepare
- Reduce the amount of potential garbage. Plan meal quantities carefully, package food in reusable
containers and use leftovers for snacks or lunches.
- Know the regulations and special concerns for the area you are working in.
- Have an emergency and contingency plan in place for your trip area.
- Travel and Camp on Durable Surfaces
- Set up campsites on durable surfaces. Avoid critical wildlife habitats, obvious animal trails and fragile
terrain.
- Avoid digging trenches around tents whenever possible. Choose well drained or high ground for tent
sites.
- Watch where you walk: use established trails to avoid trampling vegetation.
- Select launch sites carefully to avoid trampling inter-tidal life.
- Tread carefully while exploring the inter-tidal zone and return all rocks, shells, and creatures to their
original location.
- Be aware of first nation sites. Do not disturb middens, fish weirs, culturally modified trees, etc.
- Dispose of Waste Properly
- Human Waste:
- Use established vault and pit toilets where they exist.
- Pack out human wastes whenever feasible (i.e. boom box).
- If no privy is available and packing out human waste is not feasible, use the inter-tidal zone. Choose a
site that is not used by shellfish harvesters and which naturally “flushes” (i.e. wave pounded headland or
shoreline rather than an enclosed cove or bay), away from campsites and at least 100 m from running
fresh water. Dig a shallow hole about 6 inches deep and cover it after use. Try washing with salt water as
an alternative to toilet paper, otherwise all toilet paper must be burned or packed out. Carry Ziploc bags
and/or brown paper bags to conceal contents for used toilet paper or feminine hygiene products.
- All feminine hygiene products must be completely burned or packed out.
- Urinate in the inter-tidal zone and away from known tent sites.
Waste Water:
- Use biodegradable soap.
- Drain waste water from cooking into the ocean.
- Wash dishes at the ocean’s edge or dump waste water into the ocean at water’s edge.
- Brush teeth at the ocean’s edge and spit into the water.
Food Waste and Garbage:
- Food waste must be packed out, or completely burned where appropriate.
- As your kayaks become emptier begin to fill them up with litter on the beaches that you can bring back
with you and recycle.
- Separate clean recyclables from garbage and deal with these appropriately after the trip.
Camping:
- Leave campsites as clean as or cleaner than when you arrived.
- Remove all ropes, line and twine from trees.
- Leave What You Find
- Leave what you find. Do not disturb natural features.
- Within Parks, do not collect natural objects. Elsewhere, discourage collecting natural objects.
- Dismantle any structures that you have built before moving camp.
- Do not drive nails or spikes into trees.
- Do not remove or handle cultural objects.
- Minimize Campfire Impacts
- Respect fire bans
- Fires must be a safe distance from drift logs and vegetation.
- Fires must be small enough to put out quickly and completely
- Build your fire below the high tide line or in designated fire rings or previously well established fire pits.
- Avoid building fires near the canopy of overhanging trees and in sandy areas with evidence of large tree,
shrub or bush root systems.
- Fuel should consist of driftwood found on beaches below the high tide line and be small enough to burn
down completely to ashes.
- Once the fire has been extinguished, all signs of the fire should be obliterated.
- Do not construct a ring of rocks around fires as it scars the rocks, disturbs habitat, and can split from heat
and become a safety hazard.
- If appropriate, dismantle any fire pits you may find.
- Crush any charcoal and then remove all charred remains by scattering it in the ocean.
- Respect Wildlife
- Do not feed wildlife.
- Be aware and knowledgeable of sensitive wildlife sites (breeding areas, nesting sites, haul out sites) and
do not approach these sites in order to minimized disturbance.
- Without compromising group safety keep appropriate distances between your group and wildlife and
conduct ourselves in a manner that does not disturb or alter wildlife’s natural behavior. Avoid interrupting
an animal’s ability to rest, feed, reproduce and end for young. Disturbances can cause wildlife to expend
more energy than they otherwise would.
- Discourage wolves, cougars or bears from approaching campsites.
- Use binoculars and telephoto lenses to observe and photograph wildlife.
- Store food securely in hatches when not in Bear Country, or hang it appropriately when you are in Bear
Country and camping in an area of known bear travel or activity.
- Keep others informed about sites where problematic interactions between wildlife and people have
occurred.
- Be Considerate of Other Visitors
- Keep groups small and contained in one area. Maintain group size within Parks Canada and SKGABC
regulations and guidelines.
- Keep noise levels at a minimum at campsites, on trails and on the water.
- Co-operate and communicate in a friendly manner with other groups and individuals
- While launching and landing on a beach, groups should remain tight and not taking up the entire beach
so that others can use the waters edge.
- Store gear neatly when on shore, i.e. keep a tidy site.
- Keep others informed about sites where problematic interactions between wildlife and people have
occurred.
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