Fundraiser started for composting toilets after Churchill River being 'loved to death' - Action News
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Saskatchewan

Fundraiser started for composting toilets after Churchill River being 'loved to death'

People are coming to the Barker Island area for whitewater rafting, but not enough are taking their waste out with them, a tour guide said.

People are coming for whitewater rafting, but not enough taking care of their waste, says tour guide

The Barker Island area has white water rafting from beginner level to highly advances, Ric Driediger said. (Churchill River Canoe Outfitters/Facebook)

The Barker Island area in northern Saskatchewan is known for white water rafting and camping and ishome to the Whitewater Festival.

But it's been having a problemhuman waste being left behind.

Now, locals are fundraising for composting toilets so they can preserve the area for generations.

The Barker Island area is a part of the Churchill River where it breaks up into channels that flow amongst islands. The geography drops about seven metresand causes rapids of all levels, Ric Driediger said.

Driediger is a tour guide with Churchill River Canoe Outfitters. He's been guiding people through the rapids since the 1970s and is one of the people behind the Whitewater Festival.

People come from all over the world to whitewater raft in Northern Saskatchewan, Ric Driediger said. (Churchill River Canoe Outfitters/Facebook)

"That area has become an amazing whitewater playground," he said. "So Barker Island is kind of in the middle of that and it's an area where a lot of people camp."

On summer nights, anywherefrom 20 to 100 people could be camping there, he said. People have been good about taking out their trash, Driediger said, but have not been as careful when it comes tohuman waste.

"The area is basically getting loved to death," he said.

Ric Driediger first began guiding people on canoes in the 1970s, he said, and loves that more are exploring the northern area. (Churchill River Canoe Outfitters/Facebook)

Some people use portable toiletswhich are five-gallon pails with a toilet lid and garbage bags, but not enough, he said. The composting toilets would allow them to have something sustainable.

To start, the toilets divert the solid and liquid human waste. Then the solid waste is moved on a conveyor belt to a spot where it's dumped in with composting worms that break down the feces. By the end of the summer, they'd have a large pile of usable compost, Driediger said.

Barker Island is a popular base camp for canoers and kayakers are it's right near multiple sections for whitewater rafting, Ric Driediger said. (Churchill River Canoe Outfitters/Facebook)

The reaction to the campaign as been amazing, Driediger said. They started a campaign on GoFundMe and have been getting daily donations, he said, but still have a wayto go to reach their goal.

If all goes well, he hopes to have the composting toilet or even two ready to go for the next canoeing season.

"I can't see this area being used less in the future. I have the feeling that it'll continue to attract people from all over the world to go paddling," he said.

The Whitewater Festival alone brings in around 100 people to the area of Barker Island. (Churchill River Canoe Outfitters/Facebook)

Currently, they need to go in with a motorboat weekly to take out garbage, he said, and he doesn't see that stopping. Maintaining it is going to be key and he'd like to see more locals helping out, Driediger said.

"The first time I went into the Barker Island area, you could tell that people had camped there but barely," he said. "And, you know, you could camp there for days and days and not see another person."

It hurts like crazylike as if somebody's slapping me in the faceto see the area abused.- Ric Driediger

Driediger said it's partially his fault there's more people with his sharing the word about the area and introducing people to it, but he still enjoys it, even if it's more crowded.

"I absolutely love this. I mean this spot is just so amazingly gorgeous, and it's so intricate with so many different rapids and different channels that one can paddle," Driediger said. "It's one of the most special areas that I've ever been in."

"There's a part of me that wishes it was like it was when I first went there," he said. "And there's a part of me that thinks 'No because so many people are there enjoying such an amazing area.'"

An image showing the silhouette of a canoe on the water with a vibrant sunset in the background.
Ric Driediger is a tour guide with Churchill River Canoe Outfitters. He says seeing people out on the water brings a warm feeling into his heart. (Churchill River Canoe Outfitters/Facebook)

Seeing people enjoy the area gives him a warm feeling, he said. People will be laughing as they go down the rapids.

"It just makes me feel really, really good when I see people enjoying the area," Driediger said. "And it hurts like crazy like as if somebody's slapping me in the face to see the area abused."