or ... "Now and Then Slocan." Photos and outdoors information from the Slocan Lake area in the southern interior of British Columbia, Canada
Tuesday, June 30, 2009
Sweet Dreams
The best local Bed & Breakfast. Amazing breakfasts. Dinner by request. A lovely old building, facing out onto the lakefront.
Tuesday, June 23, 2009
Picnic stop
This picnic area was originally conceived as part of a commemorative installation to make reparations for the government's 1950's policy of placing Doukhobor kids in reform school. Scores of kids who were living in a communal Doubkhobor community 100 km south of here, being educated within their community rather than within public schools, were apprehended for truancy and brought to New Denver to be forced into residential schooling. Their parents were allowed to see them on Sundays through a chain-link fence. The journey up the valley was often gruelling and could take many hours. It was forced cultural assimilation. There was resistance, at times violent.
The fractured picnic table is symbolic of the fracturing of families that occurred. The picnic area is lovely and well-tended. Unfortunately the reparations process broke down and this gesture left many survivors feeling unsatisfied and insulted. So there's no plaque, no explanation. Only an unusual pair of picnic tables.
The fractured picnic table is symbolic of the fracturing of families that occurred. The picnic area is lovely and well-tended. Unfortunately the reparations process broke down and this gesture left many survivors feeling unsatisfied and insulted. So there's no plaque, no explanation. Only an unusual pair of picnic tables.
Tuesday, June 16, 2009
Carpenter Creek Mouth
Monday, June 15, 2009
Sunday, June 14, 2009
The Secret Lupine Garden
Along the foreshore at the south end of the village are the hospital, the heli-pad, the meadow, a scrubby area, the Kohan Reflection Garden and then Centennial Park and its campground. Tucked into the scrubby area behind the wall of wild rose bushes, where no one ever goes, is the most amazing secret wildflower garden. Lupines bloom at this time of year on roadsides all over our area, but the Secret Lupine Garden is exceptional for the density of flowers, the lakefront location and the sheer range of colours. No one knows whether they were sown by a local Miss Rumphius or not. Old-timers say they've been growing for fifty years at least.
Labels:
Plant life,
Spring
Saturday, June 13, 2009
Carpenter Creek This Week
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)