10 hours of labour every day. A 20 kg bag on his back. Kilometres of trekking across rocks and mud.
For years, Antoine Moses spent his summers at tree-planting camps in western Canada. Whatever the weather, he worked on reforestation to repair the damage caused by the forestry industry. Then, as if that weren’t enough, came the ultramarathons. Races of 125 and 170 kilometres that tested physical and mental endurance.
Behind the performance lies an uncomfortable reflection on industrial forestry, endurance, and what is truly demanded of the body—and of the forest.