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February 10, 2026
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Visitor Info Centre volunteers predict busy 2026 tourist season

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Fire, floods and Fulford-Ganges Road construction notwithstanding, 2025 brought a bump in visits to the Salt Spring Island Visitor Information Centre (VIC) — a 30 per cent increase in centre visitors over the previous year.

And those nearly 10,000 visitors were mostly greeted by volunteer ambassadors, according to VIC steering committee member Elaine Senkpiel, who said the committee trains and schedules community members interested in helping out — they have a roster of 41 currently — and is always recruiting.

Even on a winter day, there is action at the VIC. People stop by to take pictures with their phones of constantly-updated daily and weekly event boards, they grab maps of hiking and walking trails. And they watch a slideshow on one of the centre’s TV screens — featuring pictures of the island from the Salt Spring Photography Club. Some are captioned, some are not; the staff identify places that catch visitors’ eyes and direct them to the relevant point of interest.

“We promote all things Salt Spring,” said Senkpiel. “Arts, culture, entertainment, adventure, recreation. We see people in person, we handle email inquiries, we talk on the telephone.”

While almost every visitor plans their trip online from home, once “on the ground” at their destination there’s no substitute for a brick-and-mortar location, according to VIC steering committee member Brigitte Diebold. The centre is currently staffed three hours a day, seven days a week — the more volunteers they have, the more they’re open.

“Online research, QR codes and so on are all great if you are starting your trip,” she said, “but once in the location, we find people want to hear a story — they want to find that special place on the island maybe nobody else knows about, or even just something they’ve never seen before. That’s the experience we’re giving.”

The Salt Spring Island Chamber of Commerce is the sponsoring organization, Senkpiel said, with the VIC itself operating as an official Destination BC facility. That means all volunteers undertake training through a provincial online learning centre program — facilitated now by volunteer certified training coordinator Dave Rumsey —  and do 20 hours of “shadowing” with an experienced ambassador.

“We’re one of 134 centres in B.C. under the Visitor Services Network Program umbrella,” said Diebold. “The mandate and the reporting line comes directly from Destination BC — they’re giving information to us, making sure we have the right training, setting standards for how we operate.” 

Volunteer training includes taking part in one of several periodic “familiarization tours,” where businesses have reached out to the centre to have VIC staff come visit — to ensure they’re familiar with what each has on offer. Senkpiel says those tours are always popular, and she finds information flows in both directions — the participating businesses learn about one another, too. 

The VIC team last year covered 1,239 hours at the centre — almost 43 per cent more time than the previous year — welcoming visitors that were overwhelmingly from elsewhere in Canada. Just 15.8 per cent were foreign tourists, according to VIC data — about half from the U.S. and the remainder mostly from Europe, Asia and Australia.

And a full 26 per cent of visitors identify as local — specifically from Salt Spring Island.

“Someone who has lived here a long time might wonder what could be in here for them,” said Senkpiel. “Maybe they just stopped in because they have visitors coming — but they’ll always discover new things they didn’t know about.” 

In addition to visitor statistics that go into the Destination BC portal, that affiliation with a larger body means VIC volunteers spend some time promoting the rest of our beautiful province alongside Salt Spring — and while they’re the first to admit they’re not equipped to plan someone’s whole vacation, centre volunteers tend to have a lot more regional knowledge than one might think. 

Senkpiel told a story about an off-season visit from a New Zealand couple planning a driving loop around the province, who found themselves delightfully chatting for nearly an hour with VIC volunteers — and wound up with all kinds of ideas for places to visit on Vancouver Island and beyond.

“I’ve camped a lot with my little travel trailer,” laughed Senkpiel. “And that’s actually been very helpful in my role here, because I can say ‘oh, if you’re in Osoyoos, you should stop into the Burrowing Owl winery,’ or whatever. A lot of us have travelled a fair bit, and we can share that information with people who come in.”

Interestingly, some 42 per cent of parties tracked were Salt Spring “day trippers,” with 44 per cent staying one to three nights; only 13 per cent were staying more than a week. For those quick-trip visitors in particular, the centre becomes a valuable resource the moment they arrive.

“They take the bus from Fulford, land at our bus shelter and go, ‘what can I do for the day?’” said Senkpiel. “Or they come in on Harbour Air or Seair, and don’t have a plan — so they end up exploring the village. We’re hoping that they’ll see, for example, ‘oh, the Apple Festival is on at the end of the month,’ and they say to themselves they should come back.”

When they’re not open, there are brochures in a rack outside, and they’re working on replacing it with one that’s more protected from the elements. Always taped in the window are easily viewable bus and ferry schedules — and Dave Paul from the Fritz pops by as often as he can to post what’s showing at the theatre, Senkpiel said.

“We operate on such a shoestring budget,” said Senkpiel. “It’s amazing the volunteers have done as well as they have over the years with the limited resources they’ve had.”

Local businesses often help fill those gaps. One grocery store stepped up last summer to fund a summer student program that greatly boosted daytime staffing, Senkpiel said — they’re also responsible for the parade of fresh flowers that greet visitors nearly as enthusiastically — and the other donates funds for supplies for centre volunteers themselves.

“It’s wonderful how the community supports us as we’re supporting them,” she said. “We couldn’t operate and do what we do without the donations we’ve had. We are here for everyone; we’re all working together.”

Senkpiel said apart from a call for ever-more volunteers — reach out to 250-537-5252 to sign up — the message for islanders today was to stop in soon to update the VIC’s supply of pamphlets, brochures and business cards. Event notices should be half page size, she added, so everything fits when it gets busier — and when they bring materials in, year-round, they can always update their hours with staff for the VIC’s information boards.

“Bring in your flyers soon, because the busy season starts fast,” said Diebold. “We’re seeing travel coming in earlier and in higher numbers than last year, and I think we’re only going to see more this year.”

LCC plans old fire hall takeover

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Salt Spring officials won’t have to raise taxes to maintain the old Fire Hall No. 1 in Ganges next year, having found efficiencies within the budget to both maintain the 73-year-old building and slightly drop a projected tax increase.

Salt Spring’s Local Community Commission (LCC) managed to shave a little more than $62,000 off the taxpayer’s portion of their provisional spending plan Thursday, Jan. 29, even after a modest increase in the budget to maintain the soon-to-be-vacant fire hall.

Ownership of that hall is being transferred to Capital Regional District (CRD) ownership for the princely sum of $1, following terms of a 2021 memorandum of understanding between that body and the Salt Spring Island Fire Protection District (SSIFPD). That agreement has SSIFPD retaining control of the hall until four months after the new fire hall on Lower Ganges Road is occupied — and created an easement allowing the fire district to construct and maintain a 30,000-gallon water tank on the west side of the property for firefighting.

Regional staff told LCC members they expect to assume full responsibility for the old fire hall as early as this summer, and until a future use — and possible revenue stream — is sorted out, the CRD needs to keep up with basic maintenance and security.

“Once it’s transferred over to us, we’re responsible for all the utility costs and security of that building,” said senior manager Dan Ovington, outlining typical expenses such as a phone line for alarm monitoring, repairs and maintenance during the transition period.

“And quite often, when we take over a building, there’s some wiring or similar thing that needs to happen so we’ll use our regular contractors that support our other facilities.”

Ovington said staff would be bringing forward the recent assessment of the building’s compliance with the BC Building Code to the LCC’s meeting Feb. 12 — at which point commissioners could consider what future use options were possible. That’s the LCC’s monthly evening meeting, he said, and staff had set aside most of that time for commissioners to bring those possibilities to the public for their input.

“The current occupancy permit is specific to a fire department,” said Ovington. “So in order to put in anything outside of that — there are limitations.”

The net impact of Thursday’s budget discussions will be a one per cent reduction in the tax increase projected for 2026, from an anticipated 9.5 per cent bump to 8.5 per cent — a somewhat hard-fought shift that went back and forth across the meeting. While commissioners found themselves acting with less unanimity than when they began three years ago, CRD director Gary Holman took a philosophical approach to those disagreements, opining the level of discourse was something to be envied, not avoided.

“I think, after our third budget, we disagree on some outcomes because our discussions are more productive,” said Holman. “Everybody, myself included, has a better understanding of the various budgets. The discussion we have here, this is the kind of discussion that we should be having at the [CRD] board level.”

The LCC’s Feb. 12 meeting will be held at SIMS starting at 5 p.m. 

One hour per week can make a huge difference

This week in our Stepping Up series we meet Elaine Shaw, who enjoys volunteering in the Extended Care Unit of Lady Minto Hospital.

In addition to raising funds for Lady Minto Hospital, Greenwoods and Braehaven through Thrift Shop sales, the Lady Minto Hospital Auxiliary (LMHA) provides volunteers for the Extended Care Unit (ECU) at Lady Minto Hospital. LMHA volunteers take care of a regular coffee/tea/cookie service, buying treats for residents and assisting the activity coordinator with special events.

Read about volunteer Elaine Shaw’s experience as an ECU volunteer below, and if you think you might be interested in joining her and other team members, send an email to lmhas22@outlook.com or phone the ECU activity co-ordinator at the hospital at 250-538-4809.

Q. How long have you been volunteering at the hospital’s Extended Care Unit (ECU)?

A. For about two years.

Q. What attracted you to this particular group?

A. At a party I mentioned to someone that as I was retired I enjoyed doing volunteer work on the island to keep me busy. She mentioned the ECU and asked if I would like to go in with her and check it out one day.

Q. What role do you have now and what other roles have you had?

A. I spend one hour on Wednesdays making coffee and tea, serving that and cookies to the residents. I also took on buying the cookies with money from the auxiliary and Country Grocer.

Q. What past experience have you had that has been helpful in your role(s)?

A. When I lived in West Vancouver, I had a wonderful gentle Lab. He and I went for training for him to be a “visiting dog” at Hollyburn House retirement home and  the children’s hospital. It was lovely to chat and see smiles on the faces. I did that for a couple of years. So the ECU seemed a good fit, for me.

Q. What do you like best about volunteering at the ECU?

A. Being able to chat and get smiles from residents over a funny story or event from the island. Hugs (when needed), and holding hands for a while always leaves smiles.

Q. What is something that has surprised you or you did not expect?

A. Honestly, being there made me think about my own future, preparing a little and how that should be best for myself.

Q. Is there an anecdote or memory you have that epitomizes the volunteer experience for you?

A. When someone is having a really sad “lost” day, sitting and chatting with a little hug can make a big difference.

Q. How long have you lived on Salt Spring?

A. Almost 15 years.

Q. How else might islanders know you?

A. Islanders might know me from the golf course, which I used to be very involved with. Other volunteer jobs I have are meeting cars from the ferry carrying animals that are coming here from Vancouver Island for treatment at the Island Wildlife Natural Care Centre (as needed); one hour per week at the recycle depot’s book shed, sorting donations and maintaining the space; and staffing the Visitor Information Centre on two Fridays per month. It sounds like a lot, but really it’s not. I have lots of time left to play golf, do my hobby of pottery and to dog sit for friends now and then.

Q. In a nutshell, why would you recommend volunteering with the LMHA at the ECU?

A. For the one hour a week — which is the volunteer time most of us do — it can make a huge difference in both the residents’ and your own well-being.

Volunteering on the island can be for everyone, and it doesn’t have to be a huge time commitment at all, just an hour or two on whatever day you feel is open. So many options are there to be found. The ECU is very rewarding and one day you yourself may need a helping hand or a hug!

Salt Spring non-profit groups wanting to participate in the Stepping Up series should contact Driftwood editor Gail Sjuberg at news@gulfislandsdriftwood.com or 250-537-9933.

Opinion: Changing the tone of the ‘drip, drip, drip’ sound

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By JON COOKSEY

Drip, drip, drip. That’s the poison leaking into our community. Not the forever chemicals falling with our rain (though that’s bad too) but the poison of bile, which is seeping into the way we express our opinions, and the way we treat each other, even though we are all linked by our intense love for this island.

A little over a year ago, I started working on a public engagement for Transition Salt Spring (TSS), in anticipation of a long overdue revision of our official community plan (OCP), now 18 years out of date and counting. I’m a member of the board of the Farmland Trust, and I’d chosen to work on food security because pretty much everyone likes food, so a low potential for conflict. Housing, it seemed, not so much, but — like most people, I imagine — I was only half-paying attention.

I had that luxury because I own a home (okay, the bank owns a home), but it isn’t only homeowners who aren’t paying much attention. After more than a year of talking to a lot of people, I can tell you there are many, many people who are desperately affected by our housing crisis, but they too have tuned out. 

Why? Poison. Op eds and letters that threaten to crowd out important articles about roads, climate change, water, Christmas parties, repair cafes, our need for a hockey rink and 100 other things that are talked about constructively and are consequently fun to read about. Not housing. The bile just keeps rising, and the problem keeps staying more or less the same in the face of thousands of Salt Springers either unhoused or living in substandard housing.

Who would want to jump into that conversation? I’ll tell you who. Nobody that isn’t already in it. The social cost is too high, and not everybody has the skin of a rhinoceros. But the poison in the way we communicate — as distinct from the passion of our underlying beliefs — is rippling out. The bile has risen so high against our only present islands trustee — from all sides — that it’s cited as the number one reason why great people don’t want to run for office in the upcoming election. As a result, we’re likely to get only candidates at extreme ends of the opinion spectrum. Is that the choice we want in October?

I’m not writing this to wag my finger at you, or anyone. (It would be pretty stupid to say “Okay, everybody, as soon as I’m done criticizing you, no more criticism!”) We all live in glass houses (some with mould), including me. I’m writing this because I just saw an inspiring example of how we can work together, at a time when I was wondering if we still can.

If you don’t know, seven Salt Springers volunteered to be on a committee to advise McElhanney, the consulting firm hired by the Salt Spring Local Trust Committee, on how to engage our community around the OCP revision. I’m going to name them, because these people stepped up to make our community better: Eric March, Maxine Leichter, Robert Steinbach, Riley Donovan, Tim Hiltz, John Cade and Anne Gunn. That’s how you fix things. You step up. These are the people who did that.

If you don’t know them, they have very different opinions about how to revise the OCP and what the right answer is for housing on Salt Spring. And their time on the Project Advisory Planning Commission (terrible acronym, like a baby throwing up) has not been easy — in fact, it’s been pretty frustrating. So they have every reason to be cranky with each other. Even poisonous.

But when I attended their meeting last Thursday as an observer, that’s not what I saw. I saw a group of people treating each other respectfully, voicing strong opinions but finding common ground as they went along, shifting alliances on different issues depending on the facts and their consciences, and generally observing a rule that was central to my engagement for TSS. We only had three rules, but the most important was this: We will see and treat each other as friends.

You’re driving through Ganges (at 30 km/h, of course) and glance over to see if Whiskers is open and BANG! You’ve rear-ended someone. How much differently is that going to go if the person who gets out of the car in front of you is a stranger, or your friend? But that’s the thing. The person getting out of the car has a choice: to assume you’re a person who is stupid or malicious or out to get them . . . or they can assume you’re a person just like them who had a bad moment. Which assumption would you make, if that was you?

This is the choice we have in front of us, that will change everything: to start assuming that others are just like us, thoughtful, well-intended, trying to do the best for all living things (not just human things) on this island of ours. Here’s a secret: nobody agrees with you. Not about everything. Not your partner. Not your dog. Differences of opinion are the fabric of relationship, and learning to handle them constructively is the secret to a happy life. Anger, not contempt. Passion, not poison. But for this to work, we all have to do it — it can’t just be most of us. Are you on board?

Drip, drip, drip. That could be the sound of happiness.

The writer is an independent consultant and volunteer member of the Transition Salt Spring Advocacy Circle. 

Search and Rescue group drone team puts eyes in the skies

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BY SALT SPRING ISLAND SEARCH & RESCUE

When Salt Spring Island Search and Rescue (SSISAR) first began exploring use of a drone several years ago, the volunteers were working with little more than concepts, creativity and a donated consumer-level quadcopter.

Today, eight months after securing funding for a major upgrade, the team has a powerful new tool in its arsenal: an enterprise-grade drone designed for complex tasks that is capable of flying in harsh weather, seeing in the dark and pinpointing (literally with laser precision) the exact location of someone in distress.

The new aircraft, a DJI Matrice-series drone equipped with thermal imaging, high-resolution zoom cameras and a laser range finder, represents a significant leap forward for search and rescue operations on Salt Spring Island and across the Southern Gulf Islands. Alongside it, the team also secured a new smaller training drone, allowing new pilots to build skills without tying up the primary mission aircraft.

For the drone team, this isn’t about technology for technology’s sake. This is technology that will help them find people faster, while keeping ground teams safer. It will let them search areas more quickly, even when conditions are less than ideal — a frequent reality where we live.

Before the upgrade, the drone team was relying on a small five-year-old drone. While SSISAR was grateful for that initial drone donation that got them started down this path, it was starting to show its age. It was useful in calm, dry conditions, but it could not fly in rain, snow or even heavy humidity. Battery life was limited, there was no thermal camera to detect heat signatures and the small phone-based controller made it difficult to maintain situational awareness during complex searches.

Those limitations are now largely gone. The new drone is weather-resistant and designed for emergency services use. It can fly in rain and wind, operate in cold winter temperatures and stay airborne for extended missions. Its thermal camera allows operators to detect body heat through darkness, foliage or light ground cover.

Using special software developed out of Squamish, the drone also integrates with the existing search management and mapping software used by SAR teams across B.C., which provides a real-time understanding of the drone’s progress and location. When pilots locate a subject or item of interest, the onboard laser range finder can generate precise GPS coordinates of a person or object spotted from the air. Those coordinates, and photos from the drone’s onboard cameras, can be shared instantly with ground teams and search managers, reducing guesswork and saving valuable time.

These tools are no longer experimental; they are becoming a standard part of modern SAR, and we’re proud to bring that capability to Salt Spring Island.

CRD Transportation Committee bats SSIRT back to CRD Board

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Salt Spring’s bucolic reputation may be working to the detriment of local active commuters, as regional officials from Vancouver Island municipalities struggled to recognize whether a proposed bicycle path there should be included in a transportation service, rather than parks.

And despite repeated pleas from community members to advance timing for the Salt Spring Island Regional Trail (SSIRT) — cycling advocate Robin Jenkinson even managed to present her delegation via telephone from Nicaragua — directors serving on the Capital Regional District’s (CRD) Transportation Committee ended the day uncertain whether it should take responsibility for SSIRT, much less move design planning up 12 months.

That hesitance came even with the CRD Board’s budget allocation of $300,000 in design funding already made, albeit slated to start in 2027 — and after an exhaustive multi-agency feasibility study concluded the trail represented a “significant opportunity” to enhance active transportation across Salt Spring, laying out groundwork on routes and trail designs. 

It also came after the CRD’s Parks Committee unanimously recommended the CRD Board refer “planning, implementation and operation” of Gulf Island regional trails to the Transportation Committee. The board did so, but on Wednesday, Jan. 28, the Transportation Committee referred the issue back to the board. 

Several directors serve on both the parks and transportation committees.

“The Galloping Goose, Lochside and E&N, those are essential high-volume trails that are used by commuters,” said Langford director Lillian Szpak, herself on both committees. “I may be wrong here, but I thought that the Transportation Authority was looking at key commuter trails [and] I’m seeing the Salt Spring Island trail as a regional park trail. Like, there’s a difference between the two.”

The CRD plans $53.5 million this year for widening and lighting on the Galloping Goose and Lochside trails, which it has said see some 3.8 million visits per year; the 55-kilometre Galloping Goose trail alone sees more than 5,000 cycling and pedestrian users on its busiest days. 

While comparable active transportation data are not available, the proposed route of the SSIRT — running between ferry terminals at Fulford Harbour and Vesuvius Bay — sees a peak motor vehicle count of just over 4,300 daily, according to the Ministry of Transportation and Transit.

Notably, Salt Spring’s only CRD regional park is the remote Mill Farm Regional Park near Mount Bruce — three non-contiguous parcels of forest with no park facilities, accessed by dirt roads well distant from the SSIRT route. 

CAO Ted Robbins pointed out Wednesday that the CRD Board itself had not made an explicit decision that the SSIRT should be designated a “transportation” trail, which would neatly put decision-making before the Transportation Committee. And while there was an ability to move the design work up to 2026, it would still be subject to staff capacity — currently “fully allocated in 2026” to work on the regional transportation plan, according to general manager Kevin Lorette.

“One of the key deliverables, we feel, would be an analysis of what guidelines and parameters dictate a trail being a regional trail,” Lorette told the committee. “We do recognize that trail construction standards and design standards would be different if it was serving an active transportation corridor purpose versus if it was a recreational trail. And staff feel strongly that we need to undertake that work during the update to the regional transportation plan before it can consider whether or not [SSIRT or other Gulf Islands trails] should be included under the transportation service.”

Salt Spring property owners are expected to contribute some $339,000 this year to support the CRD’s new Regional Transportation Service, roughly $51 per average residential property. If managed by the Regional Transportation Service, SSIRT would be the first local manifestation of a tangible benefit for Salt Spring, according to the island’s CRD director Gary Holman. Holman, along with the island’s Local Community Commission (LCC), had opposed being part of the new service at all, given Salt Spring’s extant self-funded transit service. 

Holman said the Transportation Committee indicated it wanted a fuller understanding of the implications of taking on trails in the Gulf Islands; the committee requested a staff report to that effect.

“The good news is that the dollars are still there with the Parks service,” Holman told fellow LCC members Thursday, Jan. 29. “The design work is coming out of a capital reserve, so there would be no impact on requisition in moving it up.”

Holman said he expected the issue to advance during the CRD board’s final budget meeting March 11. 

Initial work on the long-imagined 21-kilometre SSIRT is anticipated to focus on an identified “first priority” section of the trail between Portlock Park and Mobrae Avenue, a stretch advocates say is the lowest-cost and simplest of dozens of sections necessary to connect Fulford, Ganges and Vesuvius. 

Richard Clarke earns second sailor of the year award

To be recognized as Canada’s Sailor of the Year by the sport’s national governing body is a profound honour, according to Salt Spring’s Richard Clarke.

And to receive the nod from Sail Canada twice, 25 years apart?

“I am so fortunate,” said Clarke, who caught up with the Driftwood in the scant few days he spent on-island last week. 

“It’s a blast, at 57, to still be relevant and in-demand.”

Clarke was home fresh from an awards ceremony in Toronto where he was named 2025’s Sailor of the Year — an award presented to sailors each year who bring global recognition to Canadian sailing and who are “renowned leaders that have attained high levels of excellence with significant results and accomplishments in world events or activities,” according to Sail Canada.

It absolutely tracks. Clarke represented Canada in five Olympic Games — 1992, 1996, 2000, 2004 and 2012 — won four world championship medals and one gold at the 1999 Pan American Games in Winnipeg.

He was a crew member in the 2001-2002 Volvo Ocean Race, winning the 2019 Rolex Transatlantic Race, the 2019 Royal Ocean Racing Club (RORC) Rolex Fastnet Race, the 2022 Newport-Bermuda Race, the 2019 and 2023 RORC Caribbean 600. He and his crew recently took first spot in the 2025 Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race and finished fourth in the 2022 event. 

He also contributed to breaking the world 24-hour sailing distance record four times, with the current record standing at 618 nautical miles set aboard Comanche in 2015, as well as holding records for both the Transatlantic and Transpac races.

And he’s hardly done. Just in 2024 he tallied wins in the RORC Transatlantic Race, the Storm Trysail Club (STC) Round Block Island Race, the STC Newport to Bermuda Race — for the third time in a row — the Etchells Christmas Cup Regatta, and the Bayview Mackinac Race, while taking the third position in the RORC Caribbean 600 race.

Reached last week, he was barely unpacked, leaving for Australia just a day or two later.

“I have a world championship that’s going to be in May in San Diego,” said Clarke. “It’s a smaller boat, 25 feet long, there’s three crew members. We’re training for that with an event in Australia, just to prepare and hone our skills — and race craft — as a team.”

Being away from home much of the year has been part of Clarke’s experience of sailing almost from the beginning, he said — making time spent with his wife Andria Scanlan, daughter Zoe and friends on Salt Spring all the more precious. 

“You think of it as a North American summer sport, but if I were to have an ‘off season’ it would be around November and October,” he said. “Besides that, it’s just full on — you’ve got the southern hemisphere sailing, the Caribbean sailing, the Florida and southern U.S. winter series. It doesn’t really stop.”

He laughed. “One of the benefits of the job is that they don’t send me to too many cold and unpleasant places!”

The Sailor of the Year award recognizes accomplishment, but also sportsmanship; winners are chosen in part based on the respect of their fellow sailors. Clarke — twice, now — joins a rarefied list of elite competitors in a sport he said can be tough for Canadians to even break into. As popular as sailing is, the Canadian sport centres on local clubs and amateur racing, he said — he estimates there are less than a half dozen Canadians who can call professional sailing their career.

“I joke that I’m still deciding what to be when I grow up,” he said. “But I’m fortunate, my clients are pretty ambitious and with deep pockets; they allow people like me to put together good programs with modern boats and great teams, and that allows me to continue to perform at the top of the game on the world stage.”

When Clarke was first honoured by Sail Canada in 1999, he was coming off his success racing solo in the Finn class while campaigning for his third Olympics; now, racing large boats as part of a team, it’s more about longevity and consistency in the sport, and what he called a “constant gnawing” to be better.

Success, he said, breeds on success. He said he tells young people aspiring to the life of a professional sailor to make the most of opportunities that come their way — because they come pretty infrequently.

“I’m fortunate to have been able to make the most of what came,” said Clarke. “And if you’re successful, you get to stay in the spotlight and at the forefront of the sport.”

He also expressed a lot of gratitude for the patience of his family — “The way my schedule goes, I’m not home many weekends,” he said. Indeed, between near-land and offshore racing — he also earned the 2025 Gerry Roufs trophy — he’s often kept away 150 to 200 days each year.

“There was a long time where I had to pick up the phone, get on email and solicit to try to get on programs,” said Clarke. “Now I’m blessed with trying to say ‘no’ more often, just so I can be at home a bit more.”

His focus for the moment remains a win in San Diego. Clarke said his next call was to a sail-maker, looking for materials and designs to help get any possible edge in the upcoming race.

But before he leaves there are some critical Salt Spring duties, Clarke said, travelling the world and crossing oceans notwithstanding.

“I’ve got a pile of wood to split,” he chuckled. 

Brass Roots album creates fresh musical force

I think it’s fair to say anyone attending last summer’s Fill the Cupboard musical fundraiser for the Harvest Food Bank at The Jam Factory would have been blown away by what they heard.

Not only did the inimitable Auntie Kate, Dave Roland and Tom Bowler get the ball rolling in fine style, but the crowd was then treated to something quite unexpected: a five-member horn section accompanying the R&B/rock sounds of Salt Spring’s SugarBeat band.

Earlier in the year, SugarBeat had released Roots, their first album of original songs, at a launch party at Mateada. As well as current band members Sarah Morris (vocals), Greg Pauker (guitar, keyboards, vocals), Mike Stefancsik (percussion) and Dave Roland (bass, vocals), saxophone player Alan Ett, who had played on a few Roots cuts, was among those taking the stage.

“We played at the CD release party, and had so much fun,” recalled Ett. “Bill Henderson sat in and it was just this crazy, great time. And so they said, ‘Why don’t you be in the band?’”

Ett is a musician, composer and arranger who moved to Salt Spring from Los Angeles with his wife Sheila a few years ago, after decades of working in the industry, primarily as a composer and producer of music for television and film.

By the time the outdoor August concert came along, the already brilliant songs on Roots had been transformed by Ett and the newly formed Salish Sea Horns. Since then they’ve merged their talents and energy to create the just-released Brass Roots CD.

“It’s pretty phenomenal,” said Ett. “It’s kind of Earth, Wind & Fire meets the Rolling Stones. It’s really fun. The horn players and the talent that’s here on Salt Spring is the other thing that made it all possible.”

Salish Sea Horns members are Ett on tenor and soprano sax, Wendy Milton on alto sax, Chris Watt on baritone sax, Derrick Milton, trumpet, and John Whitelaw, trombone.

Pauker, who is an internationally known sound engineer and audiovisual system designer and does sound for many live local shows, explained the process of turning an existing album into a fresh brass-infused version. Firstly, SugarBeat had lots of material to work with from their sessions of recording Roots.

“We like to record everyone as much as possible as a group, rather than sitting in front of your computer and typing out tracks,” Pauker said.

Horn arrangements were then done by Ett, with some assistance from industry colleague Jim McMillen, to coalesce with the existing group recordings.

The expanded SugarBeat band continues to meet weekly and members are working on about 10 new songs, with horn parts included at the start this time.

“When we get together, Alan does a lot of things, we come up with ideas, we kind of go through everything and might say, ‘Yeah, that’s great. Let’s go in that direction.’ It’s a really nice process,” said Pauker.

Speaking more about their live performances, Pauker said, “We leave a lot of openness, where we can interact. There’s a structure of the song, but then there are parts where we just go with whatever works, and that’s a great thing about playing with Bill [Henderson] too, because he’s always had that in his music. He never plays the same song.”

“It’s very gratifying to be associated with these guys,” added Ett, “because everybody has the same kind of ethos. The basic driving force behind the band is to communicate life through music, and that’s very cool. And you know, overall, if you do a concert somewhere, and one person walks out of the room away from the concert having their life changed — feeling better for one day, one hour — we’ve succeeded. We’ve done something important.”

In addition to playing with SugarBeat, people attending the Gumboot Gala last October will undoubtedly remember Ett playing saxophones with Henderson on his Chilliwack hits, or with other musicians at the Jazz at the Harbour House weekly Wednesday series.

SugarBeat’s founding members — Pauker, Stefancsik and bass player Bob Delion — had played together on and off for years, and connected with powerhouse vocalist/songwriter Morris about five years ago. Delion more recently had to step back from playing, which is when Roland was recruited.

Another food bank fundraiser — which was spearheaded by the new non-profit Salt Spring Groove organization with support from local corporate sponsors — will hopefully take place again this summer. In his role as a Lady Minto Hospital Foundation board member, Ett is involved with a series of fundraising house concerts, and other possibilities are in the works.

Copies of Brass Roots in CD and vinyl form are available from sugarbeat.hearnow.com/brass-roots/ or by emailing Pauker at gpauker@sculptorsystems.com. It can be heard through sugarbeat1.bandcamp.com and other streaming sites.

Ensemble takes audiences around the world

BY MEGAN WARREN

FOR ARTSPRING

World music lovers are in for a special treat this week when Tamar Ilana & Ventanas take the ArtSpring stage as part of the ArtSpring Presents series.

The Toronto-based ensemble arrive on Sunday, Feb. 8 at 2:30 p.m. with a performance that takes audiences on a musical journey spanning continents, centuries and over 20 languages with their signature fusion of musical traditions including flamenco, Sephardic, Balkan and beyond, led by the powerhouse vocals and rhythmic footwork of Jewish-Indigenous artist Tamar Ilana.

Ilana’s connection to world music isn’t just professional — it’s in her DNA. As a child, she travelled to remote Mediterranean villages with her ethnomusicologist mother, gathering traditional songs and dancing flamenco. That childhood spent on the road is the heartbeat of Ventanas’ sound. The group’s name, Ventanas, is the Spanish word for “windows,” a fitting title for a band that offers a view into so many cultures. In a single set, audiences can expect to hear songs in Ladino, Bulgarian, Romani, Arabic and more, drawing inspiration from universal themes of migration and identity. To attend a Ventanas concert is to travel to corners of the world without ever leaving your seat, transcending both geography and time through a repertoire that feels both ancient and modern.

Founded in 2011, the six-piece ensemble features some of Canada’s most accomplished world musicians who intertwine their various backgrounds to create a musical world all their own. Together, they lead audiences down the less-travelled paths of the Mediterranean, mixing contemporary interpretations of ancient ballads with original compositions and new choreographies.

The group’s expertise has earned them significant acclaim, including four Canadian Folk Music Award nominations. Their reach grew even further during the pandemic when they served as the house band for Toronto arts organization FabCollab’s Women in Song series, collaborating with global artists from Iraq, Cuba, Brazil and beyond and garnering over 100,000 views through the National Arts Centre. 

This performance from one of Canada’s most vibrant and eclectic ensembles promises to transport your mind, uplift your spirit and get your feet moving.

To book your seat for this afternoon of rhythm and song, visit purchase.artspring.ca or the ArtSpring box office.

MYCYK, Felicity (Lis) Anne Elizabeth

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December 27, 1940- January 30, 2026

Felicity Anne Elizabeth Mycyk was born in England to a Welsh father and English mother on the eve of WWII. After the early loss of her father (Thomas Ronald Maravan Williams) in the war, her mother (Betty) remarried a kind and gentle Scotsman (Neil McEwan). After moving to rural Scotland, Lis’s family quickly grew to include sisters Sara and Mary.

In 1952 her family emigrated to Canada, settling in Qualicum Beach, British Columbia. She later studied physiotherapy at the University of Alberta, where she formed lifelong friendships with her physio sisters.

There she met her husband, Alexander (Oleh) Mycyk, who famously serenaded her under her dorm window, refusing to go away until she agreed to go on a date. They married in 1963 and shared more than 55 happy years together, raising two daughters, Jennifer and Heather (Katya), while living all across Canada from coast to coast to coast.

After returning to BC, Lis and Oleh ran a B&B (Seraphim B&B) where they welcomed guests from all around the world to their beautiful Salt Spring Island property. They spent many happy years running the B&B, helped by their goofy, and much loved dog, Hennessy.

She was an accomplished needlewoman, avid gardener, animal lover, Pie Ladies member, competitive bridge player—she and Oleh taught about half of Salt Spring how to play—and lifelong learner who even took up learning Welsh in her 80s, just because she could.

Lis was predeceased by her husband Oleh and daughter Heather (Katya). She is survived by her daughter Jennifer Oestreicher (husband Geoff), grandchildren Sky, Kate, Alex (wife Liz Bellefleur), and by Katya’s family: partner Steve Forbes and grandchildren Emily Forbes (partner Joah Chlopan, son Griffin) and Trinity Forbes.

Hers was a life well lived. She is lovingly remembered and deeply missed. A gathering of friends and family is planned.

The family is profoundly grateful for the exemplary care she received at Lady Minto Hospital during her final days. The compassion shown by Doctors Applewaite and Gummeson, as well as that of the entire Acute Care nursing team was a great source of comfort to Lis and her family. The family also thanks Dr Magda Leon for her care through all the family illnesses, and thanks the many friends and neighbours who sent their well wishes and thoughts, all of which buoyed her spirits during the final days.

In lieu of flowers, the family asks that you consider a donation in memory of Lis to either The Lady Minto Hospital Foundation or the BC Cancer Foundation.