An article by Mr. W.H. Blake,
K.C., of Toronto, on “The Laurentides National
Park” appeared in the February number of the
University Magazine. The following extracts
have been taken from Mr. Blake’s manuscript:
“It was in the year 1895, that
the idea took substance of setting apart some two
thousand five hundred square miles of the wild and
mountainous country north of Quebec and south of Lake
St. John as ’a forest reservation, fish and
game preserve, public park and pleasure ground’.
At a later date, the area was increased, until now
some three thousand seven hundred square miles are
removed from sale or settlement. An important
though indirect object was the maintenance of water-level
in the dozen or more rivers which take their rise in
the high-lying plateau forming the heart of the Park.
“When the ice takes in early
November the caribou make it their great rallying
ground. These animals, so wary in summer and early
autumn, appear to gain confidence by their numbers,
and are easily stalked and all too easily shot.
It is to be feared that too great an annual toll is
taken, and that the herd is being diminished by more
than the amount of its natural increase. Slightly
more stringent regulations, the allowance of one caribou
instead of two, the forbidding of shooting in December
and January, when the bulls have lost their horns,
would effect the result, and would ensure excellent
sport in the region so long as the Park exists and
is administered as it is to-day. There is, however,
very serious menace to the caribou in the unfortunate
fact that the great timber wolf has at last discovered
this happy hunting ground. Already it would seem
that there are fewer caribou, but the marked increase
in the number of moose may be one cause of this.
Before the days of the Park the moose were almost
exterminated throughout this region; but a few must
have escaped slaughter in some inaccessible fastness,
and under a careful and intelligent system of protection
they have multiplied exceedingly. Man may not
shoot them, and probably only unprotected calves have
anything to dread from the wolves.
“In the administration of this
Reserve the government adopts a policy which has shown
admirable results; and as this policy is in direct
contrast to the one pursued in the Algonquin Park it
may be interesting to explain and discuss it.
It can be admitted, as a matter of theory, that a
‘public park and pleasure ground’ should
be maintained by the people for the people, and that
no individuals should have exclusive rights conferred
upon them to fish or shoot within it. This ideal
conception takes no account of human nature, and a
scheme that has to do with the control and conduct
of men should not disregard their weaknesses, or the
powerful motive of self-interest. The greater
part of the Laurentide Park is free to anyone who takes
out a license and complies with certain regulations.
But, at the points most threatened by poachers, the
practice is followed of granting five-year leases
of moderate areas to individuals and to clubs.
The first requirement of these grants is that the lessee
shall appoint a guardian, approved by the Department,
and shall cause the conceded territories to be protected
in an adequate manner. The guardian, for his
part, is immediately answerable to an individual who
pays his salary. He contrasts his former precarious
living as a trapper or poacher with the assured competence
which he now earns more easily, and makes his election
in favor of virtue. Thus he becomes a faithful
servant both of the Government and his employer, and
a really effective unit in the protection of the Park.
The lessee, in turn, will neither practice nor tolerate
any infringement of the laws which would imperil his
lease, nor deplete of fish and game a country which
he intends to revisit. He would not necessarily
be actuated by these motives if he entered the Park
casually and considered nothing but his own sport
or pleasure. It may be added that the lessee has
reasonable assurance of the extension of his privileges
if they are not abused and knows that he will be compensated
for moneys properly expended if the Government sees
fit not to renew his term. The guardians co-operate
with one another under the general guidance of a most
competent inspector, and the striking increase in fish,
fur and feather is apparent not only in the region
immediately protected but also ouside its boundaries.
Trappers who fought bitterly against being excluded
from this part of the public domain now find that the
overflow of wild life into the surrounding country
enables them to bring more pelts to market than they
did in the old days, and have become reconciled.
Guardians, gillies, carters, porters and canoemen
live in whole or in part, on providing fishing and
shooting. Under no other arrangement could the
conceded territory afford sport and a living to so
many people, and in no other way could the balance
between resources and their exhaustion be so nicely
maintained.”
Mr. Blake corroborates
the statement of the shameful act. “On
sighting a band of six caribou he bade his man sit
down to give him a rest for his rifle. He then
fired and continued firing till all were killed.
When his companion made to walk towards the animals,
Sir said to him roughly:
“‘Where are you going?’
“‘To cut up the caribou.’
“‘... I don’t want them.’”
This game murderer killed three times
as many as the prescribed limit on this one occasion.
Yet nothing was done to him!