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JAMIESON, Florence Joyce

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Florence Joyce Jamieson
July 27, 1925 – February 3, 2019

On Sunday Feb 3, Joyce Jamieson (nee Fisk) passed away peacefully at Lady Minto Extended Care in her 94th year. Mom enjoyed excellent health during her life but her body succumbed to the effects of end-stage Parkinson’s disease.

She is survived by her son Paul (Willa), daughters, Stephanie (Tom) and Leigh-Anne (Mike). Grandchildren, Alexandra, Cameron, Jennifer (Jay) and Lindsay (James), and 4 great grand children.

Joyce, pre-deceased by her husband Cam in 1977, continued her nursing at RCH, New Westminster and later as campus nurse at BCIT, Burnaby. Upon retirement in 1981, mom moved over to her paradise on Salt Spring Island where she continued to thrive and enjoy a productive & happy life volunteering countless days at the Lady Minto Hospital Thrift Shop. Joyce shared the goal of all involved at the Thrift Shop to raise the vital funds that were re-directed back to the Hospital Auxiliary for new equipment and to support other people in need throughout the Gulf Islands. An avid supporter of preventative health care, mom was instrumental in organizing and producing the Island Health Fair for many years. She will be remembered by many as a loving, caring and generous person that always put the needs of others ahead of herself.

Her passion was her home that she created and enjoyed over the years with the help and love of her many friends and family. Those involved will cherish the many great memories of the fun that we had with Mom and most notably, the numerous tins of her delicious oatmeal cookies.

In the last year of her life, she was thoroughly loved and cared for by the amazing nurses and support staff at Lady Minto Hospital and Extended Care. All involved exchanged daily hugs and received Mom’s bright smiles of appreciation, (her personal signature).

Joyce spent most days (when not raining) outside on the wonderful garden patio enjoying all the flowers, hummingbirds, and the peace and quiet. This was her favourite spot in Extended Care.

Mom requested that in lieu of flowers, donations to “Joyce’s Memorial Garden Fund”, c/o Lady Minto Hospital Foundation, would be greatly appreciated and used to update and maintain this garden sanctuary with beautiful plants, flowers, and bird feeders for all to enjoy.
Mom, “We love you to the moon and back”.
“Celebration of Life” will be announced when date confirmed.

COOPER, Dr Frank Corbishley Tee

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Dr Frank Corbishley Tee Cooper
Feb. 8, 1933 – Feb. 11, 2019

Dr Frank Cooper died February 11th at Lady Minto Hospital. He leaves his wife of 58 years , Lynne as well as his 4 children Stephen (Sarah), Ben (Jeanie) Jane (Rob) and William (Laurel) and 12 grandchildren.

Frank was born in Wilmslow, England Feb 8th, 1933. He attended Manchester Grammar School followed by medical school and 3 years of military service in the Royal Navy. He met Lynne Sparkes in Portsmouth in 1960 and they were married a year later.

Frank and Lynne emigrated to Canada in 1966 with their 2 boys to work as a GP in rural Ontario. In 1970 the now family of 4 moved to BC to specialize in Radiology, settling in the Fraser Valley to raise their family on a small farm with room for their dogs.

In 1976 a fortuitous conversation led to purchasing a share of the Maracaibo Estate on Salt Spring Island. The property became a happy retirement home in 1997 after many happy summer vacations.

A celebration of Frank’s life was held at Lady of Grace on February 18th. We know Frank would have appreciated everyone who was able to attend or would of liked to attend.

The family thank all those that were so supportive in his last weeks of life, including Dr Beaver, the kind nurses at Lady Minto Hospital, Christie Doyle at Hayward Funeral Services and Father Scott Whittemore.

Memorial donations in memory of Frank Cooper can be made to the Lady Minto Hospital Foundation by visiting their website: http://ladymintofoundation.com

CARTER, Gary

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GARY CARTER
MARCH 1933 – JANUARY 2019

This is to let his many friends on Salt Spring Island know that Gary Carter has gone on his next adventure. To say the very least, Gary had a full and interesting life, often doing what others said couldn’t be done. Even as recently as this past December shortly before his passing, as always, Gary was planning his next big project for this upcoming spring.

He enjoyed fishing, first with a penny line and worms and then, with flies until an injury to his shoulder made it impossible to use his fly rod. He started out removing tree limbs for B.C. Hydro and became an artist at dangerous tree removal, sometimes, as some might say, even becoming a danger to himself. Over the years, he became adept at reading a stand of trees and could tell you how many board feet of good timber it contained.

He loved a bargain and could often be found looking through the damaged or “use immediately” goods at the grocery store. He was full of tall tales which amazingly turned out to be true.

Left to mourn are his daughter Candise Carter Macdonald White (Frank White), grandson David White (Becky Dusenbury), grandson Derek White, granddaughter Sarah White (Aaron Labey) and great grandson Myka White (parents David and Becky) and many cousins and relatives near and afar.

He will also be missed by his constant companions Marley and Ku and by all those who enjoyed a real character.
The family would like to express their sincerest thanks and appreciation to the staff at Harmony Health in Duncan who, in his final years, took such excellent care of Gary’s needs.

At Gary’s request, there will be no service, H. W. Wallace Funeral Services (Duncan) are in charge of the arrangements.

“He gave me life, and for that I am eternally grateful” – (Candise White).

“The Lord bless you and keep you,
The Lord make his face to shine upon you
And bring you peace.”

Passing the shovel to a new generation of farmers

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Kaleigh Barton wasn’t planning on becoming a farmer. The reason she came to Ruckle Farm on Salt Spring from her hometown of Port Alberni was to learn about wool.

“At the time I was taking a degree in textile arts. My big interest was wool and I wanted to know where it came from,” she explained. “I’d learned lots about yarn and how to spin it and weave it and do all these kinds of hand skills so I was curious to see how the sheep were raised, how they were shorn and what the wool is like when it’s on the sheep.”

However, most of the work she did on the farm took place in the vegetable garden.

Now, Barton runs Heavenly Roots Farm with her husband, Ben Corno, working a five-acre property leased to them by the Salt Spring Island Farmland Trust, selling their produce at the Tuesday and Saturday Markets in the summer. They are also beginning to sell their produce into local grocery stores. Although neither of them have a family background in farming, the idea of growing organic and sustainable food appealed to them, and set them on an unexpected career path as young farmers.

Barton is not alone in this decision to farm. She is part of a growing movement of young people drawn to the honest work of providing food for people. This young generation of farmers combines the ideas of permaculture, resilience, conservancy and food production to make a whole new way of feeding ourselves.

“We see different things crumbling around us and we want to prop them back up and create something beautiful . . . Once that’s started, [we] realize how healing and grounding it is to be involved in those natural cycles and to be aware of when the rain is coming and be excited about it. Having dirt under the fingernails all the time is a pretty good feeling,” said Milo Stuart, another young farmer working on the island.

Stuart grew up in Oakland, Calif. and was introduced to farming in Hawaii when he got a job at a work trade farm.

“I was just completely blown away by that concept. You have a place to stay, and you have to take care of some animals and plant some food. I was like ‘OK! Sign me up.’ I had no idea that that was even a thing and it completely opened my world,” he said.

Stuart farms at multiple locations on the island. He is a full-time farmer for Salt Spring Island Community Services’ Harvest program, and has begun a nursery and landscape design company that gives people the chance to learn how to create productive food-generating landscapes. For him, the goal is to create a sustainable food system, through building food forests or incorporating less impactful practices into his farming.

“Right now farming is heavy heavy input. Even organic manual vegetable market gardening is extremely input heavy,” he said. “You’re having to baby these really spoiled brats into yielding these vegetables. You can’t just go and throw seeds into the ground and watch them grow . . . I’m not saying it’s bad, I’m just saying there’s definitely a balance to be struck.”

The movement of young people back to the land is growing. However, young farmers are fighting an uphill battle. While young farmers are facing multiple hurdles like high land costs, they also are able to access a wide variety of resources that were not available to previous generations. Social media is a big tool for new farmers, both as a marketing tool and as a source of inspiration.

“It’s super fun for me as a farmer to be able to see what’s happening on farms all over the world via Instagram,” Stuart said. “You’re getting ready to get going for the season and somewhere in Australia they are fully into it and doing something completely different. You almost get to go back and forth in time that way. There’s a camaraderie in it and it is super inspiring to see the movement happening actively.”

Barton uses social media more as a way to document the growth of her farm.

“I do a little bit of blogging, especially about seed saving because that’s one of my biggest interests,” she added. “I don’t know how interested people are in it, but I like to do that because it shows that I am thinking a lot about what I’m doing.”

Stuart explained that the internet has allowed him to get inspiration from people who are pushing the envelope when it comes to their farms.

“As a younger generation, we’re realizing that the way farming has been done is not sustainable,” he said. “It’s not regenerative and we’re willing to experiment. We’re willing to try all sorts of crazy stuff and a lot of the time it falls flat. When it does work it is super exciting and we want to share it with the world.”

When she came to Salt Spring, Kaleigh Barton wasn’t planning on becoming a farmer. She wasn’t planning on the work, on hammering in fence posts around a five-acre plot, on getting her hands dirty, or on having her hopes dashed by a disease or a cold snap.

“When I look at it, I’m most proud of the big things. I see the whole yard that’s fenced and I remember pounding all of the posts and that gives me a lot of pride. I never knew how to do that, and I never even thought of how a person would put up a fence. It kind of amazes me that we did that,” she said.

“I think I’m a farmer now.”

Follow Kaleigh Barton at @heavenlyrootsfarm, and Milo Stuart at @rainwalkdesign.

Trans Mountain pipeline expansion recommended by NEB

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The National Energy Board has recommended the federal government proceed with the Trans Mountain Expansion Project as being in the public interest, despite the fact that increased marine traffic will likely cause significant adverse effects to the southern resident killer whale and increase greenhouse gas emissions.

The Canadian government purchased the pipeline from Kinder Morgan for $4.5 billion in 2018. Groups opposing the expansion project say the ruling was not a surprise, given the government’s motivation to complete the project, but cite conflict of interest in having the owners of the pipeline overseeing the approval process.

Reconsideration of the NEB’s previous approval was mandated by the Federal Court of Appeal, which found the board had not adequately consulted with First Nations or considered risks to the marine environment the first time around. But First Nations leaders who spoke during a press conference in Vancouver after the report was released Friday morning said nothing had changed about their “deeply entrenched” opposition to the project.

“We have a duty here in British Columbia,” said Grand Chief Stewart Phillip, who is president of the Union of B.C. Indian Chiefs. “Let me say that we are all proud British Columbians, and we have a duty to protect what we have been blessed with here in regard to the pristine beauty of the environment. We are not Albertans.”

The NEB’s reconsideration specifically examined the impacts of project-related marine shipping related to the application of the Canadian Environmental Assessment Act and the Species at Risk Act. It has listed 156 conditions that must be followed if the government approves the project, as well as 16 non-binding recommendations.

A summary of the report states that in the NEB’s view, considerable project benefits include increased access to diverse markets for Canadian oil; job creation; capacity building for local and Indigenous communities; direct spending on pipeline materials in Canada; and considerable revenues to various levels of government.

“However, the board is also of the view that the project and its related marine shipping carries risks. Its burdens include the significant adverse effects that are likely to be caused by project-related marine shipping on the southern resident killer whale and Indigenous cultural use associated with the southern resident killer whale.

Saanich-Gulf Islands MP Elizabeth May was at the table with the Union of B.C. Indian Chiefs during Friday’s press conference, along with representatives from the NDP, West Coast Environmental Law and Stand.earth. May said the Green Party of Canada would do everything in its power to fight the decision.

Vehicle fire slows traffic

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The Salt Spring Fire Department responded to a call for a vehicle on fire at the intersection of Cusheon Lake Road and Fulford-Ganges Road on Wednesday morning.

Ian Marcotte, the driver of the vehicle, said he pulled the truck over when he smelled something burning.

“Then all of a sudden flames were coming out,” Marcotte said. “I threw some snow on it. It’s a good thing there was snow or else it would have burnt right up.”

The flames were extinguished when fire crews arrived. The crews used a fire extinguisher and water from a rescue tender to put out any remaining hot spots and cool the engine down. The cause of the fire was not immediately known because of the snow used to put out the fire.

Nobody was injured.

Both Cusheon Lake and Fulford-Ganges roads were reduced to single-lane traffic during the incident.

The truck was towed and roads were opened at around 11:30 a.m.

Funding support still needed for The Root

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The long-held dream of creating a community food storage, production and distribution centre on Salt Spring is becoming closer to reality every day, but more help will be needed for The Root to take hold of its potential.

Speaking during a Seedy Saturday presentation on Feb. 9, Salt Spring Farmland Trust president Pat Reichert said the new three-storey building at Beddis Road is just about at lock-up stage, with insulation in but doors still needing to be installed. An operating plan is likewise in development, all of which is sparking interest in a unique island innovation.

“We have received a lot of off-island and regional interest in what we’re doing here, because it’s really the only one of its kind in the province,” Reichert explained.

The Root will provide space for islanders to store and process large food crops. The new building is being constructed by Mark Saunders of SR Design and offers around 3,000 square feet of space on a 1,000-square-foot footprint. The ground level will be for temperature-controlled storage, including open, refrigerated and freezer storage. “We’ll be able to grow more, and store it through the seasons,” Reichert said, noting that would help extend a good local apple crop, as one example.

The organization is loosely targeting a fall opening date for the centre. While many granting bodies and private donors have already helped, completion will depend on raising additional funds necessary to purchase the kitchen equipment and other construction needs, as well as for ongoing operations.

For information on how to help, visit ssifarmlandtrust.org.

For more on this story, see the Feb. 20, 2019 issue of the Gulf Islands Driftwood newspaper, or subscribe online.

Help needed for Lyme battler

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Salt Spring’s farming community and other friends are asking for support to provide ongoing treatment for Sharon Shewchuk, an islander who is experiencing a severe relapse of late-stage Lyme disease.

Shewchuk is the operator of Salt of the Earth Farm, located on the side of Mount Maxwell. She described her Lyme symptoms in the Driftwood last May as “a terrifying experience of smouldering fevers, swollen joints, trembling limbs, unearthly peripheral neuropathies and nauseating pain. It’s like being dismantled alive, part by part.”

Shewchuk’s neighbours have recently taken over responsibility for her goats, her 100 laying hens and the eggs they produce as she has essentially become bedridden by pain. Friends have also stepped in to set up a GoFundMe fundraising campaign and an Island Savings trust account for donations to help with treatment costs, which could run into the tens of thousands.

The campaign raised nearly $6,000 in the first few weeks, but with medications costing close to $1,000 per month, much more will be needed. Long-term treatment of 18 months or more may be required.

“We have every faith that Sharon will get better. We just need to give her time to do that,” said Shewchuk’s neighbour Ahava Shira. “The money we gathered so far is fabulous, but the treatment is so expensive. If we’re looking at one to two years, we need other avenues.”

While Shewchuk lives alone and has no family nearby, she has been embraced by the weekly meditation group that Shira runs, as well as the farming community.

Shewchuk was severely disabled by Lyme disease from 2003 to 2010 when the illness ravaged her muscles, joints, nervous system, immune system and vision. Swelling in the brain caused a series of small strokes which left her unable to speak for years. She required assistive devices to communicate and accomplish basic tasks.

“It took Sharon many years to obtain a correct diagnosis from an infectious disease specialist, but with the proper treatment she made an astonishing recovery. Within a year of beginning antimalarial and antibiotic therapies she had recovered her speech and progressed enough physically to become a passionate and dedicated member of Salt Spring’s farming community,” the GoFundMe page explains.

Shewchuk has located a naturopathic doctor in Victoria named Dr. Maria Payne Boorman, who has been working to develop a protocol for Lyme disease over the past eight years.

A local naturopath on Salt Spring has agreed to administer the treatment Boorman specifies, since even travelling to Ganges is beyond Shewchuk’s current ability. The cost of the drugs and supplements is very high, however, and coverage has been denied both by the province and the supplying company.

Donations can be made to the GoFundMe campaign under “Help Salt Spring Farmer Fight Lyme Disease” or to Islands Savings account #2688620.

Shira said help will also be needed for a letter-writing campaign to B.C. Health Minister Adrian Dix to lobby for Shewchuk’s medication coverage. Details will be announced when a date is organized.

For more on this story, see the Feb. 20, 2019 issue of the Gulf Islands Driftwood newspaper, or subscribe online.

Human/climate impact explored

Most documentary films end leaving the audience on its own to deal with the complex issues raised in the subject matter, but one film coming to the Salt Spring Film Festival will be offering a bit more to viewers.

The film called Metamorphosis was created by Nova Ami and Velcrow Ripper. It deals with climate change and the ways that humanity can transform itself to deal with the crisis. The film looks at the effects of climate change and goes through solutions that people can begin enacting in order to help stave off the biggest effects.

“It looks at how humanity is dealing with change — how we resist change, how we move through change and embrace change,” Ami said. “It’s a very cinematic film that is kind of like a poem. We explore the themes of the psychological impacts of climate change, and we also incorporate the work of artists with ecological themes.”

The experience of Metamorphosis also includes an experiential workshop that helps personalize the climate crisis and explores the psychological effects of dealing with climate change.

“For us, the workshop is almost as important as the film itself. It’s great to see the film, but the workshop is so rewarding,” Ripper said. “We feel that people really need this: to come together and go deeper because we’re all confronting this right now.”

“A lot of people might come out of the film wanting to do something, to make change and might not be quite sure how to go about doing that, or how to go about sparking change in their communities,” Ami added. “It provides a container for people to really focus on the feelings that they experience during the viewing of the film.”

The film follows the path of the monarch butterfly from its birth as a caterpillar to its annual migration from Canada to Mexico. That metamorphic journey is a parallel to humanity’s path through the crisis. The film compares our current state to the caterpillar, consuming everything in sight, and says that the way we can survive is through transformation.

“We need to recognize that we’re in a climate emergency, and we can’t continue business as usual, we actually need to change almost every angle,” said Ripper. “In a shift to a carbon-free future we also need to change the kinds of jobs that are available. Sustainability can’t just be for those who can afford it, it has to be for everyone.”

The experience of Metamorphosis is not just a gloom and doom tale of climate change. Ripper and Ami wanted to incorporate some of the beauty and love that people have for the Earth as part of their work. The original idea for the film was to have it look like a painting. Using cinematography techniques like drone flying, time-lapse motion control and macro lenses, Ripper and cinematographer Grant Baldwin were able to incorporate art and beauty into the film, creating stunning visuals to go along with the subject matter.

“This could even be a climate change date movie. This is the kind of move that you can go to and take your family, friends or date and not be totally depressed afterwards. You’ll be inspired and have a cinematic experience,” Ripper said.

Some islanders may know Ripper from his time spent living on Galiano Island.

The film shows at the film festival on March 3 at 12:30 p.m., and the workshop, co-sponsored by the Salt Spring Arts Council, will be held at Mahon Hall on the evening of March 4 from 7 to 9 p.m. See the film festival and Salt Spring Arts Council websites for more information.

GISS boys qualify for islands

The GISS junior boys basketball team’s season came to an end last week but not before the team had qualified for the Vancouver Island Basketball Championships.

“The island championship is a fantastic opportunity for our boys to compete against the top teams from Vancouver Island,” said coach Kim Chalmers.

Held at Dover Bay Secondary in Nanaimo from Feb. 14-16, the boys lost their two games: to Oak Bay by an 80-36 score on Thursday and to Belmont by a 66-34 score on Friday. Hudson Scheres was GISS’ player of the game in the first match and Reuben Wright had that honour in the second game. Ladysmith was the eventual tourney winner, defeating Dover Bay 57-44 in the final game.

The GISS junior boys had a successful regular season that saw them place second in their mid-Vancouver Island league, losing only two games, both to Brentwood College. 

Chalmers said that this year’s squad had a nice balance of quickness and size, and also had several strong outside shooters.

She said the boys benefitted from the solid Grade 8 program at Salt Spring Island Middle School and training opportunities this season with the GISS senior boys team. 

“There is a bright future ahead for boys basketball at GISS,” she said.