Tod Inlet: A Healing Place
By Gwen Curry
()
About this ebook
Tod Inlet has been a place of refuge for hundreds, if not thousands, of years, but few are aware of its history. This tiny fjord, less than a half hour from downtown Victoria, is part of Gowlland/Tod Provincial Park and is accessed by a forested path beside Tod Creek. For centuries it was the home of the WSÁNEĆ (Saanich) people, providing everything for their spiritual and material sustenance. In the early part of the twentieth century a small company town grew on its shores. Houses, a railway, a clay mill, a factory and a dock for steamships were built for the Vancouver Portland Cement Company. When the cement company had exhausted the limestone quarries, Jennie Butchart began her ambitious cultivation project, Butchart Gardens. Developers made plans for marinas, golf courses and hotels to be built on this quiet inlet, but local citizens, environmentalists, scientists and Native people fought back.
Almost all the buildings have been demolished, but concrete and iron are not easily disposed of, and reminders of the past confront the walker everywhere: shell middens spill into the sea, fruit trees and garden flowers mingle with indigenous plants, and century-old industrial relics litter the creek, the forest and the Inlet. But despite the ravages of the past century, Tod Inlet retains a spirit of peace and renewal. In other environments this clash of the man-made with the natural can create an unsettling mix. Here, time has allowed nature to begin the healing and has morphed into a present that speaks softly of its past.
Gwen Curry takes us on her walks down to the Inlet. Her beautiful photographs capture the spirit of present-day Tod Inlet, while her sensitive prose gives us glimpses into the Inlet’s natural, industrial and Native history.
Gwen Curry
Gwen Curry is an artist/writer and a former professor in the visual arts department at the University of Victoria. She is a member of the Royal Canadian Academy and her work is in many private and public collections. Her first book, Tod Inlet: A Healing Place, was shortlisted for the Roderick Haig-Brown Regional Prize for B.C. literature. In it, her photographs and writing detail her walks to Tod Inlet and its fascinating history. Gwen has travelled widely but finds nothing more exciting than exploring the rugged coast of British Columbia. She has visited Malcolm Island and the surrounding area many times in the past decade and appreciates what a beautiful yet vulnerable place it is. Her most recent book (with photographer Daniel Hillert) is Converging Waters: The Beauty and Challenges of the Broughton Archipelago. Gwen Curry lives in Brentwood Bay (Vancouver Island), British Columbia.
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Tod Inlet - Gwen Curry
TOD INLET
A HEALING PLACE
Gwen Curry
RMB LogoContents
Foreword
Introduction
Spring
Summer
Fall
Winter
References and Further Reading
Looking up Tod Inlet from waterFOREWORD
The beauty of Tod Inlet, Place of the Blue Grouse,
lies not only in the matrix of its firs, ferns, cedars and maples, but also in its underlying resilience and our commitment to have this place remain a place of refuge and healing. The Inlet, which is described eloquently in Gwen Curry’s words and images, could so easily have become a resort and housing development for a culture that mistakes wants for needs. Instead, the echoes of stream, wind and birdsong, the splash of heron finding prey and otter scrambling over rock continue to reside alongside the Inlet’s memory of steam whistle and breaking rock.
The history of this place is ever present. In the following pages you will share the layers of stories told with grace and exquisite images. The colour, texture, sounds and shapes of cultures and communities are interwoven seamlessly by an artist of profound sensitivity. With keen eyes and an inquisitive mind, Gwen continues the shapes of past and present in careful detail, always with an overarching sensitivity to life yearning for itself. She simultaneously captures the wide-angle shot of before time
and the refined view of the smallest seedling of spring. Her gift of vision is evident throughout this testimony to a special place. Take heart from her musings. She gives us not only a story we can bear witness to, but also shares the wisdom unearthed from this place for our daily mindfulness. Thank you, Gwen.
— Nikki Wright, Executive Director, SeaChange Marine Conservation Society
Aerial view of inletAerial view of Tod Inlet, with Butchart Gardens top right.
INTRODUCTION
In the four decades that I’ve walked the trail to Tod Inlet I can’t pretend to know the place. Its apparent stillness mocks me. I can name a plant, sit in reverie on one of its banks or be in awe of a leaf shot through with sunlight, but the pervasive intelligence of this place is rooted in centuries of being. Tod Inlet has been a place of refuge for hundreds, if not thousands, of years, but few are aware of its history. Six years ago I began a photographic homage to the Inlet and its surroundings. Initially its beauty and serenity were all I needed to keep me focused on my project, but its history kept intruding and I finally began to tell its story.
Tod Inlet curves away from Saanich Inlet at Brentwood Bay, 25 minutes north of Victoria, and creates a half moat around Butchart Gardens. The park entrance is easy to miss – the only indication of its location is the line of cars snugged under the maples and ocean spray bushes at the side of Wallace Drive. This section of Gowlland Tod Provincial Park is a forested trail following Tod Creek to the sea. For centuries it was the home of the W̱SÁNEĆ (Saanich) people. This sheltered Inlet provided an abundance of food, fresh water, building materials, utensils and clothing as well as a place for spiritual practice. In the early part of the twentieth century a small company town grew on its shores. Houses, a railway, a clay mill, a factory and a dock for steamships were built. The Vancouver Portland Cement Company hired Chinese and Indian workers who were seeking employment in Canada. By 1921 the cement company had exhausted the limestone quarries and Jennie Butchart had begun her ambitious gardening project, saying, We have made something ugly, now let’s make it beautiful again.
The factory carried on for many years as a tile and ceramic pot manufacturer and Tod Village was still inhabited into the 1960s. Almost all of the buildings have been demolished, but concrete and iron are not easily disposed of and reminders of the past confront the walker everywhere: shell middens spill into the sea, fruit trees and garden flowers mingle with indigenous plants, and century-old industrial relics litter the creek, the forest and the Inlet. But despite the ravages of the past century, Tod Inlet retains a spirit of peace and renewal.
My relationship with Tod Inlet began in the 1970s. There were a few structures not yet demolished and treasure hunters had picked over the remains of the Chinese workers’ village. It had been only a few years since the last houses of Tod Village were razed and almost a century since the W̱SÁNEĆ people had been able to enjoy their former hunting and fishing grounds.
It is not my intention to create a definitive history of the Inlet, but rather to wander down its trails, noticing present-day Tod Inlet while unearthing glimpses into its past. This book is a visual homage to the Inlet’s natural and constructed beauty and often the intersection of the two.
The area covered includes the Wallace Drive entrance to Tod Inlet, bordered on the south by the base of the Partridge Hills and to the northwest by the fenced boundary of Butchart Gardens – perhaps 60 hectares of this 1200 hectare park that extends down Finlayson Arm almost to Goldstream Park.
I have capitalized the word Inlet
throughout the book as a sign of my affection for it. Although the book encompasses the seasons of one year, the images are a compilation of six years of photography.
SPRING
SPRING RUSHES INTO TOD INLET, refusing to obey the calendar. In late February and early March while the rest of the country slumbers, no buds quickening, it is impossible to keep up with the changes here. Indigenous and introduced species are all awakening. The Indian plum bushes are sprinkled with thumb-sized floral arrangements of green and white, and the