Account Login/Registration

Access KelownaNow using your Facebook account, or by entering your information below.


Facebook


OR


Register

Privacy Policy

Okanagan Forest Task Force tackle ‘heartfelt’ cleanup

Three months ago, when a few fed-up locals created a Facebook group to try and get the woods around Kelowna cleaned up, they couldn’t have imagined the momentum their efforts would gather.

Today, the Okanagan Forest Task Force is an official, not-for-profit organization that has completely transformed some of the biggest eyesores in Kelowna’s wilderness through organized community cleanups.

Hauling garbage out of the woods is never an easy task, but next weekend the group is taking on a project that will be more than physically challenging.

<who> Image credit: Okanagan Forest Task Force </who>

On Nov. 5, the task force is holding a community event to clean up what was left behind after Terrance Landon went missing.

Landon had been living on crown land near James Lake, building a small cabin there. In December of 2013 he went missing, and hasn’t been seen since.

Landon’s trailer, cabin and vehicle have remained on crown land, and earlier this year the cabin was burned to the ground and the truck and camper vandalized.

Kane Blake, the OFTF’s president, says the location is a total mess: all of Landon’s clothes and belongings are strewn about, the cabin is in ashes and the truck is filling up with garbage.

“The truck has been shot at and the trailer has been trashed and ripped apart. We are doing this cleanup with sadness in our hearts and him in our thoughts,” he said.

<who> Image credit: Okanagan Forest Task Force </who>

The plan, Blake said, is to get rid of as much of the garbage as possible, tow away the truck and clean up all the nails and metal strewn about the site with a magnetic roller.

He said that cleaning up the site will obviously make the wilderness a little bit safer and more enjoyable, but will also be a service to Landon, who doesn’t deserve a legacy of garbage in the woods.

“He wasn’t someone who didn’t like living in the rat race downtown. He was actually an avid outdoorsman,” Blake said of Landon, pointing out that he lived in the woods because that’s where he wanted to be.

“This is a very special cleanup, and it’s with great sadness that we’re going to do this,” he said. “I wish we didn’t have to and we could all go up and say ‘hi’ and shake his hand.”

Blake asks anyone interested in volunteering for the cleanup to meet at James Lake at 9 a.m. on Nov. 5.



If you get value from KelownaNow and believe local independent media is important to our community we ask that you please consider subscribing to our daily newsletter.

If you appreciate what we do, we ask that you consider supporting our local independent news platform.


Send your comments, news tips, typos, letter to the editor, photos and videos to news@kelownanow.com.




weather-icon
Thu
16℃

weather-icon
Fri
14℃

weather-icon
Sat
18℃

weather-icon
Sun
17℃

weather-icon
Mon
16℃

weather-icon
Tue
18℃

current feed webcam icon

Recent Livestream




Top Stories

Follow Us

Follow us on Instagram Follow us on Twitter Like us on Facebook Follow us on Linkedin Follow us on Youtube Listen on Soundcloud Follow Our TikTok Feed Follow Our RSS Follow Our pinterest Feed
Follow Our Newsletter
Privacy Policy