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Cottage Life

Southwestern Ontario park installs wind phone to help those who are grieving

On the shore of Lake Huron, about an hour’s drive northwest of London, Ont., sits the Ausable River Cut Conservation Area. A 32-acre park dissected by the Old Ausable Channel with sandy shores and the broad-leafed trees of a Carolinian forest. It’s a popular spot for hiking, canoeing, and fishing. But as of this spring, the conservation area features a new draw: a wind phone.

A wind phone is an unconnected telephone booth, offering a private space for a one-way conversation, a concept that originated in Ōtsuchi, Japan.

Venture 300 metres from the conservation area’s parking lot and tucked off the main trail, hidden amongst the trees, is a phone booth—not bright red or glassed-in like you might be used to. This phone booth is homemade and open to the elements, built from wood and tin, with a small bench to sit on. The most notable feature is a black, push-button phone bolted to the wood. When you put it to your ear, there’s no dial tone, just silence. The phone isn’t connected to anything. A small plaque next to the phone is inscribed with a poem explaining what the setup is all about: to give those grieving a lost loved one the opportunity to say goodbye.

Ausable River Cut Conservation Area
Photo Courtesy of Ross Atkinson

The Lambton Shores Nature Trails, a volunteer group that helps maintain sections of the conservation area, installed the wind phone after reading about one along a trail in Newfoundland. Ross Atkinson, the group’s chair of operations, felt the concept could benefit the community, providing an outlet for those grieving while motivating people to get out into nature.

“A lot of people don’t want to discuss death or passing with other people, whether it’s family or friends or children. They just want to ignore it,” he says. “Even though this is an unconnected phone, it allows people to go in there and chat and get something off their chest.”

Atkinson, along with volunteers Lee Main and Ed Hunter, built the phone booth from recycled materials. They chose the location based on the area’s level ground, making it wheelchair accessible. Atkinson purchased the phone from Amazon. “I was thinking that if it ever got vandalized and we had to replace it, well, I don’t want to have to replace an antique. It’s easier for me to just replace it with a replica phone,” he says. “But I don’t think that’s going to really happen.”

Ausable River Cut Conservation Area
Photo Courtesy of Ross Atkinson (Right: Ross Atkinson, Left: Lambton Shores Nature Trails board member Ed Hunter)

The group borrowed the poem on the plaque from the Newfoundland wind phone. It reads:

“Though I’ve lost you, I can hear your voice in the silent echoes of your absence. You speak to me through rustling leaves, whistling wind, and bowing branches. Though I’ve lost you, I feel you here in this shrine of trees in nature’s sanctuary. The Wind Phone is for all who grieve. You are welcome to find solace here. Please use it to connect with those you have lost. To feel the comfort of their memory. You may hear their voices in the wind. May you be at peace with your losses.”

The idea for the wind phone came from Japanese architect Itaru Sasaki in 2011. He built a white phone booth with a rotary phone in Bell Gardia Kujira-Yama Garden outside Otsuchi as a way to grieve his cousin’s death from cancer. However, on March 11, 2011, the area was rocked by an earthquake and tsunami, claiming the lives of nearly 20,000 people. After the catastrophe, other mourners started to use the wind phone.

The idea has since spanned continents, with over 100 wind phones recorded worldwide in places such as Canada, the U.S., the Netherlands, and the U.K. In the academic journal Refract, author Laura Boyce explores the growing use of wind phones, stating that it demonstrates “a need for dedicated places to maintain sustained relationships with the dead.”

The Lambton Shores Nature Trails volunteer group posted about the Ausable River Cut Conservation Area wind phone on its social media channels and within two weeks the posts had received 10,000 views.

Ausable River Cut Conservation Area
Photo Courtesy of Ken and Anne Higgs

“I had an email from a lady who just reading the poem alone, she was crying. She admitted to crying while she was making up the email to send me thanking us for putting the wind phone in place,” Atkinson says.

The volunteer group received permission from the conservation area’s stewardship and lands manager to install the phone. Considering how much success it’s had, Atkinson says they’re thinking about installing more.

“So what if within three or four or five kilometres, there’s two of them,” he says. “It just gives people more choice of where to go.”

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Cottage Life

Ganaraska Forest remains closed after fallout from May windstorm

With tree branches trimmed, roofs repaired, and electrical lines once again humming, most Ontarians have put the May 21 windstorm in the rearview mirror. But the Ganaraska Forest, 50 kilometres southeast of Peterborough, Ont., is still dealing with the consequences.

Access to the forest’s 11,000 acres has been closed to the public since the May 21 storm. On July 14, the Ganaraska Region Conservation Authority (GRCA), the governing body in charge of maintaining and operating the forest, announced that it was extending the closure until September 30.

According to the GRCA, the May 21 storm was the worst natural disaster to hit the forest since its founding in 1947. High-speed winds took down 600 acres worth of trees, with many blocking main trail access points in the west and central sections of the forest. “Many of the downed tree situations include very dangerous spring poles [and] cracked and/or unusually compressed trees,” says Ed Van Osch, a forest recreation technician working with the GRCA, in a statement.

Downed Trees
Photo courtesy of the Ganaraska Region Conservation Authority/Facebook

Forest staff have been working since May to clear approximately 600 kilometres worth of trails, but high-wind events since the May 21 storm and limited staff have slowed the clean-up efforts. “The Conservation Lands department consists of five full time staff and four summer contract staff,” said Pam Lancaster, GRCA’s Conservation Lands coordinator, in a statement. Those nine staff members are responsible for clearing the Ganaraska Forest trails while also managing nine other conservation areas operated by the GRCA.

Staff from Saugeen Valley Conservation Authority, Rideau Valley Conservation Authority, and Northumberland County Forest have assisted with recovery efforts. For the time being, the GRCA isn’t accepting public volunteers to help with clean-up as dangerous and complicated tree removals pose a safety risk.

In mid-July, logging operations will start in the west and central sections of the forest. The GRCA is allowing an increased number of logging operations this year to assist with recovery as they salvage and harvest the fallen trees.

“Timely salvage of blown over Red Pine is integral to preventing further forest management issues from arising. Downed material not only increases fire risk in the forest, but it also acts as a breeding ground for bark boring beetles,” said Gus Saurer, a GRCA forester, in a statement.

Downed Trees
Photo courtesy of the Ganaraska Region Conservation Authority/Facebook

The east section of the forest was not hit as hard as the west or central sections, but it will also remain closed, the GRCA says, as there are concerns it doesn’t have the capacity or parking space to handle a surge in recreational use.

For those who purchased a forest membership (not including cross country ski memberships) between June 1, 2021 and May 21, 2022, the GRCA will extend the membership by 12 months from its original expiry date. For those who purchased a cross country ski membership that expired after the forest closed on May 21, you’ll receive a six-month hiking membership. In both cases, a notification should be sent to you by email.

Downed Trees
Photo courtesy of the Ganaraska Region Conservation Authority/Facebook

As clean-up efforts in the Ganaraska Forest continue, GRCA staff ask that the public respect the forest’s closure and do not enter. “The GRCA is committed to reopening recreational trails in the Ganaraska Forest to recreational use. Everyone’s continued cooperation, understanding, and patience is appreciated,” says ” Linda Laliberte, the GRCA’s CAO and secretary-treasurer, in a statement.