Tuesday, June 30, 2026
ADVT 
National

'If We Don't, Who Is?' Adventurers Protect Winter Playground As Climate Changes

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 25 Dec, 2019 09:33 PM

    BANFF, Alta. - Professional adventurer Greg Hill was skiing in Pakistan five years ago, when he got caught in an avalanche and broke his leg.

     

    As he healed, he reflected on what legacy he would have left behind had he died.

     

    Hill had climbed hundreds of mountains, skied millions of vertical feet and documented many of his adventures in Canada, South America, Norway and Pakistan.

     

    "It was awesome — I was encouraging people to push deeper," Hill said in an interview. "But it was the selfish 30-year-old adventurer. It was all about my own stuff and what I can do."

     

    Now a father in his 40s living in Revelstoke, B.C., Hill wanted to do "something that can be learned and taken and adopted by others and help improve the world."

     

    He's one of a growing number of Canadian adventurers — including ice climber and paraglider Will Gadd, retired ski cross Olympic gold medallist Ashleigh McIvor and alpine ski racer Erik Guay — who have come to focus on the environment.

     

    They're all ambassadors for Protect Our Winters Canada, a non-profit advocacy group based in Waterloo, Ont. It's made up of outdoor enthusiasts, professional athletes and sporting brands trying to get governments to take action on climate change.

     

    "Our overall goal is to unite and organize the outdoor community," said Dave Erb, the group's executive director. "As people who enjoy spending time in nature and recreating in nature, it really should mandate our participation in the fight to save and protect it. If we don't, who is?

     

    "We're the ones who see the changes but also have a deep connection to these landscapes and these magical places."

     

    Erb said the group's ambassadors can help influence how others think about climate change, but find themselves in a hypocritical situation.

     

    "They love going and exploring and living this adventure-based lifestyle, but they also know their carbon footprint is big."

     

    Hill said that was exactly his thinking.

     

    "It's always been in the back of my mind the hypocrisy of my situation — the way I was loving and enjoying nature, on the one side, and then, on the other side, kind of helping to destroy it."

     

    Hill said he was seeing the effects of climate change first hand, such as the retreating Illecillewaet Glacier in the Selkirk Mountains near Rogers Pass in B.C.

     

    "Every year, it kept going further and further back," he said. "There used to be this scary bulge to get on to it and now it has receded back 100 meters. It's so far back than what it used to be. You just didn't notice it.

     

    "If it made noise and screamed, maybe we'd do something about it."

     

    In 2017, Hill decided to do what he could to reduce his impact.

     

    He quit heli-ski guiding, sold his diesel truck and leased an electric car to travel to his adventures. He and another athlete, Chris Rubens, decided they would ski as many mountains as possible without burning fossil fuels.

     

    They documented their adventures in a film called "Electric Greg," which premiered in November at the Banff Mountain Film Festival and is part of the festival's World Tour.

     

    The film also includes a trip with his children, now teenagers, to the Athabasca Glacier in the Canadian Rockies, where markers on the ground show its retreat.

     

    In addition to changes where he skis, Hill has also noticed changes where he lives. Summers are increasingly smoky in the B.C. Interior due to forest fires, which research shows are becoming more frequent and more extreme due to climate change.

     

    Hill has also embraced recyclable bags, weekday vegetarianism and localism — eating only locally produced foods and buying items such as locally made soaps and locally roasted coffee.

     

    The transition isn't perfect, but he believes people are paying attention.

     

    "There was some skepticism at the start because I was supposed to be a globe-trotting athlete," said Hill. "In the end, if your story is relevant and real, then it's got purpose, and luckily the environmental stories are very important right now.

     

    "Mine makes a lot of sense and it's resonating with a lot of people."

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    One Snowmobiler Has Been Killed In Avalanche In Eastern British Columbia

    One Snowmobiler Has Been Killed In Avalanche In Eastern British Columbia
    North District RCMP Cpl. Madonna Saunderson confirms the victim died Saturday when a slide came down on a group of snowmobilers south of Valemount in the Blue River area.    

    One Snowmobiler Has Been Killed In Avalanche In Eastern British Columbia

    SNOW DAY: Schools Closed, Traffic Woes Across Metro Vancouver As Another 10-15 Cm Of Snow Expected To Hit Monday

    SNOW DAY: Schools Closed, Traffic Woes Across Metro Vancouver  As Another 10-15 Cm Of Snow Expected To Hit Monday
    Another blast of winter weather is headed for B.C.'s South Coast, where the weekend's snowfall has already triggered dozens of school closures across the region

    SNOW DAY: Schools Closed, Traffic Woes Across Metro Vancouver As Another 10-15 Cm Of Snow Expected To Hit Monday

    Mother Charged With Manslaughter In Death Of Four-Year-Old Son In Hamilton

    Mother Charged With Manslaughter In Death Of Four-Year-Old Son In Hamilton
    A 39-year-old woman has been charged with manslaughter in the death of her four-year-old son after investigators spent more than a year probing the case, police in southern Ontario said Friday.    

    Mother Charged With Manslaughter In Death Of Four-Year-Old Son In Hamilton

    'A Major Challenge:' Railway In B.C. Derailment Details Harsh Weather Challenges

    'A Major Challenge:' Railway In B.C. Derailment Details Harsh Weather Challenges
    CALGARY — A report by the railway company involved in this week's deadly derailment in the Rocky Mountains details how challenging it is to run trains in frigid temperatures.

    'A Major Challenge:' Railway In B.C. Derailment Details Harsh Weather Challenges

    Credit Agency Warns Big Risk To Canadian Schools If China Pulls Students

    Credit Agency Warns Big Risk To Canadian Schools If China Pulls Students
    Tuition for international students is much higher than that charged to Canadians and has become a "crucial" source of income for schools, Moody's says.    

    Credit Agency Warns Big Risk To Canadian Schools If China Pulls Students

    StatCan Says Number Of Cannabis Users Relatively Unchanged Since Legalization

    The national statistics offices says legalizing cannabis doesn't seem to have much changed how many people use the drug.

    StatCan Says Number Of Cannabis Users Relatively Unchanged Since Legalization