Parks Canada eyes eradication in war on rats
MARK HUME
QUEEN CHARLOTTE CITY, B.C. — The Globe and Mail
Published Sunday, Jul. 08 2012, 9:39 PM EDT
As project manager of Gwaii Haanas National Park Reserve, which is located in a remote archipelago off B.C.’s northwest coast, Laurie Wein has a simple job title.
But what she is doing in the park is far from ordinary.
Ms. Wein, a soft-spoken woman with a quick laugh, is waging war against rats.
“They are really neat operations because there is so much up-front planning. We do two years of planning before we go. … There will be helicopters, 20 or 30 people on the ground,” she says, sounding more like a combat veteran than a Parks Canada bureaucrat.
QUEEN CHARLOTTE CITY, B.C. — The Globe and Mail
Published Sunday, Jul. 08 2012, 9:39 PM EDT
As project manager of Gwaii Haanas National Park Reserve, which is located in a remote archipelago off B.C.’s northwest coast, Laurie Wein has a simple job title.
But what she is doing in the park is far from ordinary.
Ms. Wein, a soft-spoken woman with a quick laugh, is waging war against rats.
“They are really neat operations because there is so much up-front planning. We do two years of planning before we go. … There will be helicopters, 20 or 30 people on the ground,” she says, sounding more like a combat veteran than a Parks Canada bureaucrat.
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