
“Quite something, isn’t it?” asks Jim Hayhurst. He’s the VP of communications and marketing for Triton Logging, the Saanichton company that invented the Sawfish, and standing before the machine in Triton’s workshop, I have to agree. The Sawfish can dive to more than 100 metres, using sonar to navigate through murky water, and its eight cameras provide a live video feed to a pilot sitting in a barge on the surface. In less than five minutes, the Sawfish can find a tree, drill airbags into the wood, slice the tree off at the trunk, and then send it floating to the surface to be milled – without the risks to divers of typical underwater salvage logging, or the destructive road-building or laborious treeplanting required with conventional forestry. Last year Popular Science magazine named the Sawfish one of the best new environmental technologies on Earth. (You can also see a video of it here.)

This particular afternoon the new Sawfish is heading to Lois Lake, a reservoir created by a dam built in the 1930s near Powell River. Triton’s been logging there for the past six years, harvesting Douglas fir and Sitka spruce. But the pine-beetle crisis has flooded British Columbia’s timber market with cheap wood, so the submarine is just going to Lois Lake for testing, before it’s sent off to join two other Sawfish already at work in Malaysia.

It’s been quite a journey for Triton, which got started back in 2000 when CEO Chris Godsall, then only in his early 30s, recognized an opportunity while working for a B.C. salvage-logging company, and raised money from family and friends to build the first Sawfish. Triton now has a staff of 55 in four countries, including Thailand and Brazil, and its timber, which has received the coveted “SmartWood” label by the Rainforest Alliance, has been used in Japanese temples and California mansions. Victoria’s Dockside Green development is building townhouses with Triton wood, and Mountain Equipment Co-op used Triton’s rough fir and pine for the slatted walls of its outlet on Government Street.

“The Triton brand is valuable to countries and communities that want to be seen as responsible – economically, environmentally and socially,” says Jim Hayhurst. “Maybe that’s a tall order for a little yellow submarine, but it seems to resonate.” Generating good-news stories, it seems, is just one more of the many attributes of the amazing, made-in-Victoria Sawfish.
Saw this on the Knowledge network, what an awesome piece of equipment!1
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