Tag Archives: Port Renfrew Writers Retreat

Wilderness Writing Residency in Port Renfrew, BC, Canada: apply until midnight (Pacific Time) Friday, January 10, 2025

This is a little late (I’m sorry) but, on the plus side, it’s not a complicated application process. The residency is offered by the Port Renfrew Writers Retreat, from their About webpage,

Founded in 2019 on the west coast of Vancouver Island, Port Renfrew Writers Retreat is a space for writing that relates to the natural world.

Through in-person residencies and year-round self-directed retreats, we support the development and craft of writing projects in one of the most spectacular and storied corners of Canada.

Many of our residents have gone on to publish books and articles based on work done at Port Renfrew Writers Retreat.

Why Port Renfrew?

The story of Port Renfrew Writers Retreat starts with the story of a single tree. Big Lonely Doug is a 20-storey, 1000-year-old Douglas Fir that was saved from the saw by a logger named Dennis Cronin. The tree—the second largest of its kind in Canada—was left standing in the Gordon River Valley, a short drive from Port Renfrew, while the entire old-growth forest around it was cut down. The tree has since become an environmental icon, drawing tourists from around the world to glimpse both the spectacular capacity of what nature can create in stark contrast with the reality of industrial logging of old-growth forests on Vancouver Island.

It was this one tree that brought Harley [Harley Rustad] to Port Renfrew in the summer of 2015 to report a magazine article about Big Lonely Doug and Dennis Cronin and then later a book. It’s a corner of Canada with an undeniable magic in the mist coiling through the forests and in the whales breaching off the coast, in breathing the salt-tinged air and spotting a black bear or a cougar or an elk—or stumbling upon one of the largest trees in the country.

By Ryan Cutler – Reddit / Imgur, CC BY 4.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=145127049

I found information about the retreat and about applying for it on the Wilderness Writing Residency webpage,

The Wilderness Writing Residency is a ten-day, in-person residency in Port Renfrew, British Columbia, for non-fiction writers working on a magazine feature or book project on a theme related to the natural world.

Surrounded by inspiring jagged coastline and old-growth forest, writers will use the solitude for uninterrupted work while also partaking in group work with fellow writers and faculty editors.

Write the wild

Writers will critique and challenge ideas of wilderness and nature, and examine our complicated relationships within these complex, thorny terms.

ACCOMMODATION

Accommodation will be provided by the residency at no cost to the writer in the form of a self-contained, one-bedroom cabin within the Wild Coast Cottage development in Port Renfrew.

FOOD

Residents will need to cover most of their own food costs but some group meals will be provided by the residency. More details will be provided.

TRAVEL

Residents will be required to arrange travel to Port Renfrew at their own expense. Grants through the Canada Council for the Arts are available to support travel to attend residency programs.

GROUP WORK

Residents will partake in at least one group session to workshop work-in-progress with peers and faculty, offering and receiving feedback within the group.

BIG TREE TOUR

A guided excursion to some of the most storied forests and trees in the area.

WHO SHOULD APPLY

The Wilderness Writing Residency is open to applications from writers of all levels and backgrounds, but preference will be given to emerging writers.

ELIGIBILITY

Residents must be 18+ at the time of the program start date. International applications are welcome but we are unable to assist with visas.

PROGRAM FEE

$200, due upon acceptance into the residency.

Apply for 2025

The Wilderness Writing Residency 2025 will run from February 24 (arrival) to March 7 (departure).

Applications are due Friday, January 10 [2025] at midnight Pacific Time.

Use the form below to submit your application, which must include both a short bio as well as a one-page outline of your project. Application is free.

[scroll down to form on webpage]

Good luck!