Most Recent Articles
It Was Alberni Or BUST Despite No Malahat Highway!
Last week Frank Boucher told us of his first trip by road over the Malahat in 1911 . It had taken him, his wife and sister-in-law 18 hours to make the 20-kilometre trek, they having had to walk most of the way to relieve Frank’s just purchased, old and tired horse. (Speaking of tired, so were they when they finally reached Duncan!) Compare then, this dramatic account of a motor (i.e. automobile) cavalcade from Victoria to the Albernis just...
Read MoreFrank Boucher’s Malahat Adventure Makes Today’s Driving Look Easy!
For the British Columbia government that 20-kilometre stretch of mountainous road known as ‘The Malahat’ must be an ongoing headache because of the never-ending calls to “fix it.” For 25,000 motorists who daily drive the ‘Hat there’s the frustration of repeated, hours-long closures because of accidents and construction. Several times this past summer, trying to get to and from work on time must have seemed like shooting craps. The fact remains, we modern-day drivers are spoiled. Toiday’s paved Malahat,...
Read MoreIsland Highway’s Malahat Stretch Has Always Challenged Motorists
The Malahat is in the news again. In fact, the Malahat, Greater Victoria’s vital mountainous link to the rest of Vancouver Island, has been in the news repeatedly this summer because of almost weekly accident-caused traffic stoppages. 25,000 vehicles use this 20 kilometre-long stretch of highway daily. It seems, sometimes, as if it has ever been thus: the calls for widening, or a by-pass, or a tunnel, or a bridge or improved ferry service across Saanich Inlet. Or a...
Read MoreMapmakers Unkind to Original Indigenous Name-Givers
News Item: The Vancouver Parks Board is conducting a ‘colonial audit’ that includes the provenance of place names… One of history’s many injustices is the way in which so many Indigenous geographical names were erased in favour of European nomenclature. Admittedly, even those names that survive can offer challenges in spelling and pronunciation for non-Aboriginals. More recently, some names that were appliex—sympathetically or otherwise—to suggest Aboriginal title have come into disrepute. Long used to denote “an American Indian woman...
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