RBC Blue Water Project 13 - Tides Canada

he Great Bear Rainforest is the largest coastal temperate rainforest remaining on earth and one of the world's greatest environmental treasures. The protection of the rainforest was the result of an unprecedented agreement between First Nations, industry, governments and environmental groups. It is a model for the rest of the world on how to create sustainable environmental and economic development.

Blue Water Documentary
Blue Water explores life's dependence on Earth's most precious resource - fresh water. The film's chapters paint a stunning portrait of the fragile ecologies the RBC Blue Water Project® members are working to protect, and highlight the critical role that human behavior plays in the health of the world's watersheds.

From inner cities to remote rural villages, from school rooms to board rooms, the film explores issues of water sustainability from a variety of human perspectives.

The Kings Walkway

The walkway has now gone many years without maintenance, and is in a
highly deteriorated and dangerous state. It is one meter (3 feet and 3
inches) in width, and is over 100 meters (350 feet) above the river.
Nearly all of the path has no handrail. Some parts of the concrete
walkway have completely collapsed and all that is remaining is the
steel beam originally in place to hold it up. One can latch onto a
modern steel safety-wire to keep from falling, though it can't hold
much weight. Several people have lost their lives on the walkway in
recent years; after four people died in two accidents in 1999 and
2000[1], the local government closed the entrances. To this day it
remains illegal to cross. However policing is extremely minimal and
many adventurous tourists still find their way onto the walkway to
explore it.
Some travelers choose to begin by walking through the train tunnel to
the dam, and then walking back towards El Chorro. Most climb across a
series of dilapidated stanchions and then up a well-protected chimney
on the cliff face to reach the Caminito del Rey. A cable runs the
length of the path, giving people a method of securing themselves
throughout the duration of the path. However, the stability of the
cable is unknown. It would be wise to have space (more than 10 meters)
between travelers. That way, if a section breaks, the cable will only
be holding the weight of one person.
The regional government of Andalusia budgeted in 2006 for a
restoration plan[2] estimated at € 7 million.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caminito_del_Rey