Passer au contenu principal
Livraison rapide à 28$CA  La Terre est désormais notre seul actionnaire  
Lire notre Rapport d’avancement

Lire notre Rapport d’avancement

Notre Rapport d’avancement de 2025 explore toutes les nouvelles initiatives, parfois amusantes, parfois un peu étranges, que nous mettons en place pour réduire notre impact sur la Terre, notre unique actionnaire.

Découvrir

Livraison rapide à 22$CA

Livraison rapide à 22$CA

Les commandes sont expédiées dans un délai de 1 à 2 jours ouvrables et arrivent dans un délai de 3 à 5 jours ouvrables.

Les commandes sont emballées et expédiées dans un délai de 2 jours ouvrables. Les commandes passées pendant la fin de semaine ou les jours fériés sont traitées le jour ouvrable suivant.

En savoir plus

La Terre est désormais notre seul actionnaire

La Terre est désormais notre seul actionnaire

Si nous voulons préserver notre planète, sans parler de notre activité, nous devons tous agir dans la mesure de nos moyens. Voici ce que nous pouvons faire.

Lire la lettre d’Yvon

Bringing Back the Light with Redd Fish Restoration

Patagonia  /  12 sept. 2017  /  Workwear, Activism, Culture, Planet

Forest and river restoration work fueled by a love for wild salmon.

For British Columbia’s timber barons, the forests of Vancouver Island were too rich to resist: giant spruce, fir and red cedar trees that fetched top dollar on the open market. On the island’s remote and rain-soaked Pacific coast, mechanized logging kicked into high gear in the 1950s and continued through the decades that followed.

“Before 1995, no protection was afforded to stream ecosystems here,” says Jessica Hutchinson, a field ecologist and the executive director of Redd Fish Restoration (formerly Central Westcoast Forest Society).

“They were able to log right up to the creeks, and we’re still seeing the impacts of that activity today. In some places it’s dark, tightly replanted monoculture forest where diverse and well-spaced old growth once stood, and in others it’s debris from logging operations that chokes a river out and causes excess sediment to build up. We also see collapsed bridges that impound streams, and even streams that were excavated for gravel for road construction. In those cases, the gravel was important spawning habitat for wild Pacific salmon.”

A nonprofit Patagonia environmental grantee, Redd Fish Restoration works to restore local forests and watersheds that have been damaged or degraded by human activity. Led by environmental scientists, the group’s research initiatives are complemented by many gut-busting days on the ground.

“It’s a mission to get to most of our sites,” Hutchinson says, “and we pack in hundreds of pounds of gear by hand: chainsaws, winches, peaveys, you name it. We’re trying to help these watersheds recover, and that often means moving logs by hand and using hand-powered winches instead of excavators or other machines that would make the job easier but harm the understory and compact the soil.”

Whether it’s deactivating roads, replanting native vegetation, clearing out clogged salmon streams or thinning out second-growth trees to let more life-giving light through to the forest floor, their projects help accelerate the natural process of recovery.

“Restoration isn’t about getting a stream or forest to its prealtered condition,” she continues. “We’re never going to get it back exactly how it was. But what we can do is help that system heal. It’s superchallenging work, but we see a real resurgence in biodiversity within just a few years. And yes, it’s physically exhausting, but at the end of the day being part of a positive outcome is an amazing return on the investment. It feels good to undo some of the damage that’s been done.”

Redd Fish Restoration
To learn more about Redd Fish Restoration and support their work, please visit reddfish.org.

WORKWEAR
Workwear is not a new thing for us, but we’re excited to be reimagining the work-specific side of Patagonia. To stand up to the toughest tasks, we’ve developed a utilitarian line of jackets, shirts and pants built with super-durable, long-wearing fabrics like Iron Forge Hemp™ canvas—an innovative, heavy-duty blend of industrial hemp, recycled polyester and organic cotton. It’s 25% more abrasion resistant than conventional cotton duck canvas and needs no break-in; and our hemp-blend workwear clothing is also Fair Trade Certified™ for sewing. See the collection at patagonia.com/workwear.

This story first appeared in the 2017 Patagonia Workwear Catalog

Patagonia Ironclad Guarantee Icon

Nous garantissons tous les produits que nous fabriquons.

Voir la Garantie Ironclad
Patagonia Ironclad Guarantee Icon

Nous assumons la responsabilité de notre impact.

Découvrir notre empreinte carbone
Patagonia Ironclad Guarantee Icon

Nous soutenons l'activisme de terrain.

Consulter Patagonia Action Works
Patagonia Ironclad Guarantee Icon

Nous reversons nos bénéfices à la planète.

Lire notre engagement
Recherches fréquentes