There are 350,000 place names on Canadian maps, 50,000 of them in British Columbia. Of the 1000’s that identify our Pacific Coastline, most—indeed, almost all—were coined by officers of the Royal Navy.
Read MoreWho was it who said, “The only thing we learn from history is that we don’t learn from history?
And, does history really repeat itself?
It was said of the Eliza Anderson that “no steamboat ever went slower and made money faster”.
Read MoreMy latest project, Celebrate Cowichan, what I believe to be the Valley’s only scenic 2023 Calendar.
I have two more Christmas markets coming up: the Shawnigan Lake Recreation Centre and Queen Margaret’s School this coming Saturday, the 26th, and Providence Farm on Saturday, Dec. 3rd.
Read MoreI’ve always been a tree-hugger and have long been critical of the way forestry has been and is practised in British Columbia. But I’m also fascinated by logging history, and I make no apology for that, either.
Read MoreWell, another historic Cowichan Valley icon bit the dust this week.
Read MoreThe story of Doris Gravlin has travelled world-wide over the years, mostly thanks to the internet and an almost insatiable interest in the supernatural.
Read MoreLest we forget....
Read MoreIn my day, I doubt there was a teenager growing up in Victoria who hadn’t heard of Doris Gravlin.
Read MoreThey say time flies when you’re having fun—it certainly does when you publish on a weekly basis while balancing several other balls in the air.
Read MoreHuman error. It has always been with us, always will be. For the 19 miners of the Pacific Coast Coal Mine on the morning of Feb. 9, 1915, someone’s carelessness cost them their lives.
Read MoreAttention, bank robbers! The strangest things pop up on the internet.
Read MoreOf all the coal mining disasters in Vancouver Island’s history that of the Pacific Coast Coal Mine in South Wellington stands out on two counts.
Read MoreThe thing that so many people seem to forget, or not to understand, is that history isn’t just about the past, the long ago—it’s happening all around us all the time.
Read MoreOf all the coal mining disasters in Vancouver Island’s history that of the PCCM in South Wellington stands out on two counts.
Read MoreI wonder how many people—even those who live in the Cowichan Valley—realize that Robert Service (1874-1958), the Bard of the Yukon, lived here for a time before he went to Dawson City as a bank clerk.
Read MoreThis year’s Extension Miners Memorial service, Ladysmith’s annual tribute to the 32 miners who lost their lives in a tragic explosion on Oct. 5, 1909, was held last week in front of the Metal Collage on the corner of First Avenue and Gatacre Street.
Read MoreIt was on the news that legendary country music star Loretta Lynn died, aged 90.
Read MoreAs you may have seen in the news, and in last week’s Chronicle, North Cowichan Municipality is looking to expand Mountain View Cemetery into an adjoining forest of mature fir and maple trees—proving that even dead people come first.
Read MoreThis week…a postscript to the story of the tragic Jamiesons whose curse also claimed the lives of numerous others, among them passengers of the various riverboats the brothers commanded.
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