Walking the North Arm and reading the news of the Hutowco Queen

July 28, 2022

Although I haven’t been taking the long walks of last year along  the jetty at Iona Island (I see an environmental project is splitting it up in an effort to improve salmon populations), I have been regularly drawn to Fraser River Park, where I enjoy watching the tugs go by.

After getting Covid earlier this month, I’m not up for long hikes, but have been slowly recovering with shorter ones, and reading. A friend loaned me a collection of issues of Western Mariner magazine, and I found myself yesterday reading one after another. Jack Hughes’ tug Hutowco Queen, I discovered, has found a new life as Bear I, for an aquaculture business, and was recently spotted having its engine refit at Port McNeill. I was pleased to read that! The tug was built in 1963 at Benson Bros. Shipbuilding in Vancouver’s Coal Harbour and is still working along the coast.

I remember in the late 1990s, stepping aboard the Hutowco Queen for the first time, while the tug was owned and operated by Thunder Bay Tugs in Lund. I had tracked it down for a radio documentary I was making for CBC, and in order to catch it, and its crew, I was up at 4am, and driving to Lund in the dark, with my uncle, Paul Hughes. The Heatley family had taken good care of the vessel, rebuilding the wheelhouse. I was happy to see it was operated by a family business, as Hughes Towing Company had been.

About the author

Trevor Marc Hughes is an author, writer, and filmmaker. His latest title is 'Capturing the Summit: Hamilton Mack Laing and the Mount Logan Expedition on 1925' published by Vancouver's Ronsdale Press. He has written for a variety of magazines, including explore and Rider. He is the editor of "Riding The Continent" which features Hamilton Mack Laing's cross-continent motorcycle memoirs. He is the author of his own motorcycle travelogues "Nearly 40 on the 37: Triumph and Trepidation on the Stewart-Cassiar Highway" and "Zero Avenue to Peace Park: Confidence and Collapse on the 49th Parallel". He also produced and directed the documentary films "Desolation," "The Young Hustler," "Classic & Vintage" and "Savage God's The Shakespeare Project." He lives in Vancouver, British Columbia with his wife and two sons.