Thoughts about food and other delights from Aunt B's kitchen, craft room, and community.
Thursday 16 May 2013
Wooden Boats at Maple Bay
Cowichan is perhaps, more than any other Vancouver Island community, defined by its farmland. We are blessed with rich soil and wonderful growing conditions; a landscape that favours a wide variety of crops. In travelling through the area, people are treated to gorgeous views across fields and vineyards. Like every island community though, we are never far from water. From the sandy beaches at Bamberton, to the tidal estuary of Cowichan Bay, to the deeper, sheltered waters of Genoa Bay, Bird's Eye Cove, and Maple Bay, to the fishing harbour at Ladysmith, salt water is an important part of our heritage.
At the Maple Bay Marina, they celebrate our marine heritage annually with a wooden boat festival. Originally called The Classic Boat Rendezvous, The Maple Bay Marina Wooden Boat Festival began eighteen years ago with about forty boats in attendance. It has continued annually ever since. This year the marina is expecting about twenty-five boats, and also a number of model boat builders who will sail their remote controlled scale models in a pool purpose-built for the festival.
Both work boats and recreational craft participate in the Maple Bay Marina Wooden Boat Festival. Some of the vessels participating this year have been built quite recently; handcrafted with hours and hours of painstaking attention to detail. Many are between fifty and eighty years old, and the oldest - the Walronda - is one hundred years old.
Unlike the craft at many wooden boat festivals, the boats participating at Maple Bay are not just for display; they are regularly used by their owners. The festival affords an opportunity for boaters and non-boaters alike to come and admire a form of boat building that - while not as common as it once was - provides a living, functional link to our history.
The Maple Bay Marina is expecting several hundred visitors to the festival, which takes place this weekend, over Friday, Saturday, and Sunday (May 17, 18, and 19). Click here for more information and a schedule of events.
Wednesday 8 May 2013
Cowichan Garry Oak Preserve
These gnarled looking trees, with their twisted trunks and curious shapes are Garry Oaks. Once widespread on southern Vancouver Island, their numbers have been diminishing steadily due to deforestation, climate change, invasive species, and disease.
Garry Oak ecosystems are a complex structure of forest and meadow that provide a wide variety of habitat niches. They support the highest diversity of plants in coastal British Columbia, and high diversities of insects, reptiles, and birds too.
Less than ten percent of the original extent of Garry Oak ecosystems survives worldwide; bad news for the more than one hundred species at risk that depend upon them.
Within the Cowichan Valley 20,000 to 40,000 acres of open Garry Oak meadow once existed. There are now less than 100 acres and yet our area is known as one of the last and best havens for this globally endangered habitat.
Although we may perceive them as wild spaces, Garry Oak savannahs are actually the product of careful management. For more than 4000 years here in the valley, Cowichan First Nations cared for this ecosystem through controlled burning. Fires ensured that the grasslands would continue to flourish instead of becoming overgrown with brush, and then forest. Thanks to this mindful management, the fertile grassland topsoil in our Garry Oak meadows extends as deep as three feet in some places.
Here in Cowichan we have a Garry Oak Preserve, on land purchased in 1999 and 2001 by Nature Conservancy Canada. Within the preserve a concerted effort is being made to restore the Garry Oak meadows to what they might have been prior to European settlement. Invasive species are being removed, controlled burning is being used to restore the grasslands, and plants are being grown in an on-site nursery for the purpose of reestablishing them within the savannah.
Among the plants being reestablished at the Garry Oak Preserve are forty-five red listed species; plants that are in danger of completely being completely extirpated from the local ecosystem. It is the hope of the scientists, naturalists, and volunteers who work at the preserve that, in caring for the Garry Oak meadows and planting these nursery plants, the ancient balance of flora and fauna in this area may be restored.
Scientists from across North America come to the Garry Oak Preserve to study the complex ecosystem. Much of their work contributes to efforts by Nature Conservancy Canada and other organizations working to re-establish Garry Oak ecosystems throughout their range.
For those of us in the valley, the Garry Oak Preserve provides an opportunity to enjoy walking trails, dappled shade, and beautiful scenery. While we walk and enjoy, we also learn about the many plants and animals the area supports. It's a beautiful place - both quiet and bursting with life at the same time - and it affords us a glimpse into the area's ancient past.
If you would like to learn more about the Garry Oak Preserve, you can read about it on the Nature Conservancy Canada website and you can also enjoy an informative video narrated by site manager Irvin Banman.
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