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Chetwynd chainsaw carving competition could be on the chopping block

The Chetwynd Chainsaw Carving Competition could be axed this year due to a $30,000-funding shortfall.

Carvings of mythical beasts, dinosaurs and wildlife would disappear along with the competition

The Chetwynd Chainsaw Carving Competition takes place every year in June. (CBC)

The Chetwynd Chainsaw Carving Competition could be axedthis year due to a $30,000-funding shortfall.

For the past 11 summers, world-class chainsaw artists from as far away as Australia, Zimbabwe and Japan would arrive at Chetwynd to compete in the tournament.

They'd carve everything from mythical beasts to wildlife to dinosaurs, and the intricate piecesdrewtons of tourists to the town.

But the five-day event may not happen this summer. A number of sponsors have pulled back their funding due to an economic downturn that has seen several local coal mines shutdown, according tothe Chetwynd Chamber of Commerce.
Oregon carver Chris Foltz won the 2014 Chetwynd Chainsaw Carving Championship with his piece, Killing Time. (Chetwynd Chainsaw Carving Championship)

"It's going to be the second weekend in June and a lot of long faces," said manager Tonia Richter in an interview with Daybreak North. "We just celebrated our 10-year-anniversary.We're huge. We can't lose it."

The competition typically costs $86,000 to run, Richter said. The district offers $40,000 in funding, while the rest of the money usually comes from sponsors.

Richter says she's reached out to the community, asking for support. While another $3,000 has now been raised, it's nowhere near the $30,000 that's needed to keep the event going this summer.

Still, Richter says she remains optimistic. She's hoping the district may agree to a loan to cover the shortfall. Some carversthe same ones who come to Chetwynd to compete for prize moneyhave also offered to chip in.

"To be invited to Chetwynd to carve with the best carvers in the worldthat's why they come here," Richter said."They don't want to carve with amateurs or semi-prosthey want to carve with the best of the best, and that's why they don't want to see [the competition] fall."