For the past 4 years a few of us from the Tyee Club of B.C. have been doing this in February, during the "fisheries window". When we replaced our wharf five years ago, at low tide you could see half a dozen tires on the bottom. We thought we would send a diver down, hook them up to a rope, and get rid of them. We stopped pulling at 50 tires.
To date, we have removed 300+ over the past 4 years. They have all been used as bumpers, and fallen off and sunk to the bottom. The dock owner sees a bumper missing, and replaces the tire, and the cycle continues.
The 142 were from 100yds of dock, the divers said we got 70% maybe. There are another 6-800 yards to do. There has to be another 1000-2000 tires down there.
The CR Estuary has been busy for the last 70+ years, which has resulted in the tire accumulation, but I bet it's no different than every estuary on Vancouver Island that has been used the same way. How many tires are in the mouth of the Nanaimo? Stamp? or the Fraser?
Yes, the are fairly inert, may help a bit as habitat, but bottom line is, they are garbage, and don't belong there.
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The Tyee Club in partnership with the Pacific Salmon Foundation braved the elements on Saturday and using divers recovered these tires from the bottom of the Campbell River estuary. Front row: Dylan Smith (diver), Josh Prahl (Diver, Doug Rippingale (Tyee Club) and back row: Burt Campbell (Tyee Club), Floyd Ross (Tyee Club) and Phil Griffith (Tyee Club). / Photo submitted
The Tyee Club in partnership with the Pacific Salmon Foundation braved the elements on Saturday and recovered tires from the bottom of the Campbell River estuary using divers.
This is an accumulation that goes back decades. This is the fourth year this has been done and, to date, have removed approximately 300 tires and other misc. items from the floor of the estuary. On Saturday, 142 tires were retrieved from a relatively small area after half-a-day of effort. It will be next year before the fisheries window allows them to do it again.
“We plan on ramping up things next year with more volunteers, divers and boats,” said Tyee Club member Floyd Ross. “The more debris we get off the bottom the easier nature can restore itself and provide better habitat for young fingerlings.”
The clean up was made possible with assistance from Corilair, C&L Rentals, Contain-A-Way Services and Deep Search Diving Ltd.
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To date, we have removed 300+ over the past 4 years. They have all been used as bumpers, and fallen off and sunk to the bottom. The dock owner sees a bumper missing, and replaces the tire, and the cycle continues.
The 142 were from 100yds of dock, the divers said we got 70% maybe. There are another 6-800 yards to do. There has to be another 1000-2000 tires down there.
The CR Estuary has been busy for the last 70+ years, which has resulted in the tire accumulation, but I bet it's no different than every estuary on Vancouver Island that has been used the same way. How many tires are in the mouth of the Nanaimo? Stamp? or the Fraser?
Yes, the are fairly inert, may help a bit as habitat, but bottom line is, they are garbage, and don't belong there.


The Tyee Club in partnership with the Pacific Salmon Foundation braved the elements on Saturday and using divers recovered these tires from the bottom of the Campbell River estuary. Front row: Dylan Smith (diver), Josh Prahl (Diver, Doug Rippingale (Tyee Club) and back row: Burt Campbell (Tyee Club), Floyd Ross (Tyee Club) and Phil Griffith (Tyee Club). / Photo submitted
The Tyee Club in partnership with the Pacific Salmon Foundation braved the elements on Saturday and recovered tires from the bottom of the Campbell River estuary using divers.
This is an accumulation that goes back decades. This is the fourth year this has been done and, to date, have removed approximately 300 tires and other misc. items from the floor of the estuary. On Saturday, 142 tires were retrieved from a relatively small area after half-a-day of effort. It will be next year before the fisheries window allows them to do it again.
“We plan on ramping up things next year with more volunteers, divers and boats,” said Tyee Club member Floyd Ross. “The more debris we get off the bottom the easier nature can restore itself and provide better habitat for young fingerlings.”
The clean up was made possible with assistance from Corilair, C&L Rentals, Contain-A-Way Services and Deep Search Diving Ltd.
