After Two-Year Search, Man Finds Mysterious Cliffside 'Face' On Remote Canadian Island In 2008, a kayaking tourist spotted a “face” etched into a cliff on a remote island in Canada’s Pacific Rim National Park Reserve. She snapped photographs of the rocky countenance, but when she returned to land, she wasn’t able to pinpoint its exact location. No one has been able to find it since. Until now, that is. Hank Gus of the Tseshaht First Nation, an aboriginal group in the area, recently rediscovered the face after patiently searching for it for two years, ABC News reports. The face is said to be located on a cliff on Reeks Island, which is part of the Broken Group Islands in British Columbia. "It's quite noticeable from the water; it's pretty large," Gus told CTV News of the giant face, estimated to be about seven feet tall. “It's high up and there's bunch of rock cliffs on the side.” He added that due to the treacherous terrain, it's “so hard to access.”