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British Columbia history that informs readers while entertaining them.

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It’s June and they’re ba-c-c-k! Ox-eye daisy, that is

Posted by on Jun 3, 2014 in Articles | 2 comments

  Legacy. It can be all things to all people, I suppose, and take all shapes and sizes, be they physical fact or less tangible. If measured in terms of human achievement, it’s nice to be (fondly) remembered after our brief visit on this mortal plane. The pioneering brothers John, Phillip, Augustus and Edwin Pimbury certainly left their collective mark.  They, and Augustus’ wife Ellen, are still with us in the Cowichan Valley, by the way, taking their deserved...

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More about the Westholme Giant

Posted by on Jun 1, 2014 in Articles | 2 comments

The Second Largest Douglas Fir Recalls Westholme Giant post has been drawing informed comment this week and I just found this great photo in my files. It was taken in Stanley Park, in the ’20s, judging by the vehicle. Today, this tree would never get to grow to any appreciable size; it’d be logged when hardly bigger than a fencepost judging by the truckloads that I see here, almost daily, in the Cowichan Valley . Sad. See also…‘Second Largest’...

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Second S.S. Beaver Now at the Bottom of Cowichan Bay

Posted by on May 29, 2014 in Articles | 37 comments

Well, it would appear that it’s the end of the line and Davy Jones’s Locker for the good ship Beaver II. As if Cowichan Bay hasn’t had enough trouble in recent years with derelict ships and barges that, seemingly beyond the government pale, are free to rust away at anchor then to sink and to a foul a public waterway. Go figure. The Beaver II is, or was, a replica of the historic Hudson’s Bay Co. steamship Beaver which...

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Capt. William Grant gave us the Scottish broom plant

Posted by on May 25, 2014 in Articles | 0 comments

  “He came here when he was 22, in 1849, made himself a figure, a dashing figure, apparently; everyone liked him, though he was always borrowing; always broke and in debt; full of fun; in general, a carefree adventurer…” So wrote one historian of Capt. Walter Colquhoun Grant, Sooke’s first settler and inspiration for Sooke Inlet’s Grant Rocks. Orphaned at the age of 7, the adventurous pioneer was raised in comfort by an aunt and two uncles. His doting...

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