Forum Discussion
crosscheck
Feb 02, 2018Explorer II
SideHillSoup wrote:
In BC you can cut fire wood, however you need to have Free permit from the Forrest service office in the area that you want to cut wood in. You just go into a BC Forrest service office ask for a fire wood permit, and they will tell you where you can cut and where you can’t cut. The permit is more for keeping track of who is cutting trees in a location, and they also will tell you where they don’t want you cutting like active logging roads ( safety against you getting whacked by a logging truck on some tight switch back... )
I should also add that you can’t cut or even pick up off the ground a branch or any other part of tree in BC Provincial parks or any Canadian National park. Lots of people do, but your not supposed to..... ( bad...)
Soup.
To answer the OP question asumming they are talking about camping and not domestic firewood gathering, never. Truck camping, a medium sized bowsaw will rip through fairly large sized logs(10"), and for backpacking/wilderness canoe trips, a collapsible bow saw which can cut up to 6" logs, 4" optimum.
I am not advocating breaking local laws but many of the National and Provincial parks we have backpacked in over the last 50 years all have well used steel fire rings at campsites many km from the trailhead. No one is packing in their firewood plus all of their other camping items in the many hours it takes to hike to these developed sites. Where does the wood come from?
Dave
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