ROADSIDE NATURE TOURS
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OKANAGAN
ROADSIDE NATURE TOURS
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OKANAGAN
A GUIDE TO BRITISH COLUMBIAS
WINE COUNTRY
D&M PUBLISHERS INC.
Vancouver / Toronto / Berkeley
Copyright 2009 by Richard Cannings
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted, in any form or by any means, without the prior written consent of the publisher or a licence from The Canadian Copyright Licensing Agency (Access Copyright). For a copyright licence, visit www.accesscopyright.ca or call toll free to 1-800 -893-5777.
Greystone Books
An imprint of D&M Publishers Inc.
2323 Quebec Street, Suite 201
Vancouver BC Canada V5T 4S7
www.greystonebooks.com
Cataloguing data available from Library and Archives Canada
ISBN 978-1-55365-288-5 (pbk.)
ISBN 978-1-926812-24-3 (ebook)
Editing by Kathy Sinclair
Cover design by Naomi MacDougall
Cover photograph by Graham Osborne
Photos by photographers credited
We gratefully acknowledge the financial support of the Canada Council for the Arts, the British Columbia Arts Council, the Province of British Columbia through the Book Publishing Tax Credit, and the Government of Canada through the Book Publishing Industry Development Program (BPIDP) for our publishing activities.
CONTENTS
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T UCKED INTO THE EASTERN flanks of the Cascade Mountains is a narrow valley unlike any other in Canadathe Okanagan. This small watershed is only 30 to 60 kilometres wide and extends 170 kilometres from Osoyoos in the south to Armstrong in the north. The Okanagan has a dry climate but is filled with a series of large lakes that moderate the hot days of summer and the Arctic airflows of winter. The lakes and small streams of the valley also provide water that has transformed most of the desert grasslands in the valley bottom into lush orchards and vineyards. And packed into this valley are some of the rarest and most fascinating plants and animals in the country.
When I was young, my hometown, Penticton, used to advertise itself as the City of Peaches and Beaches. In fact, a concession stand in the shape of a giant peach still sits on the shore of Okanagan Lake. In those days visitors came to the Okanagan Valley for just that combinationa week or two with the family to lie on glorious natural sand under the hot sun, followed by a quick stop at the fruit stands on the way home to Vancouver or Calgary to stock up on cherries, apricots, peaches, and apples.
Although I grew up on an apple orchard and spent perhaps too many of my boyhood summer days on the sunny lakeshore, I always knew the Okanagan was much more than peaches and beaches. Our family often hosted keen birders and young biologists who came to enjoy the valleys other richesan incredible diversity of plants and animals, many of which were difficult to find anywhere else in Canada. I quickly developed a strong sense of pride about how special this place was and have carried that feeling ever since.
After living in the urban excitement of Vancouver for more than twenty years, I was drawn back to the Okanagan in 1995 by my deep love for the region. Things had changed, of course twice as many people lived in Penticton than when I last lived there, and five times as many in Kelowna. But I also got the feeling that more local residents shared my feelings about the natural Okanagan and that more tourists were coming just to see spring wildflowers and listen to birdsong, to climb the rugged cliffs along Skaha Lake, and to cycle along the historic and spectacular Kettle Valley Rail Trail. Shortly after I settled in, I got a phone call from the local chamber of commerce suggesting that we form a group to organize an annual nature festival, an event that would have been unthinkable when I was a child.
I also noticed that the agriculture industry was changing rapidly. Apple, pear, and apricot orchards were being converted to vineyards, driven by the discovery that the local soils and climate were ideal for growing high-quality grapes for fine wines. When I was a teenager, people noted Okanagan wines only for their low prices and matching quality, but my new neighbours in Naramata produced wines that were winning awards around the world. More and more people were coming to the valley specifically for its wines; I even led a couple of weekend wine and wildlife tours for visitors from Vancouver to take advantage of this change in focus for tourism. My participants agreed that an exciting morning of birding followed by a delightful lunch on a patio with a glass of chilled Ehrenfelser was hard to beat on a warm spring day.
In the thirteen years since I moved back to the Okanagan, this shift in tourism has continued to the point where nature- and wine-loving visitors make up a significant part of the annual tourist population, although sun-lovers still crowd the beaches in July and August.
To paraphrase James Thurber, I dont know much about wine, but I know what I like. I do, however, know a bit about natural history, and I hope that this book will allow visitors who come for wine or wildlifeor even some hot sunshineto explore some of the Okanagans roads with fresh eyes for its natural treasury and to come away with a richer sense of what makes this valley one of the best places on Earth.
The Natural Okanagan
Although the Okanagans reputation for fine weather may be enough to bring visitors from the rain-soaked coast of British Columbia or blizzard-bound Alberta, one natural feature of the valley stands out as an obvious attraction: its diversity. Few places in Canadaor even North Americacan boast its combinations of desert sands and deep lakes, towering rock cliffs and rich benchlands, and cold mountain forests and hot grasslands. Freezing winds carve back the needles on stunted firs at tree line, while only a few kilometres away a rattlesnake slides around yellow cactus flowers, hunting for pocket mice. Cattail marshes line river oxbows only a few metres from sagebrush that sends roots deep into dry soils in a constant quest for water.
This wide array of habitats is not only refreshing for the hiker or biker but a real boon to wildlife. The presence of permanent water in such an arid landscape greatly boosts the numbers and varieties of animals able to live in the area. And the statistics are impressive. About 200 species of birds nest in the Okanagan Valley, more than anywhere else in Canada. In fact, few places in North America could boast such an impressive list in such a small areaarctic birds on the mountaintops, boreal forest birds in the spruce, coastal forest birds in the cedars, and southwestern desert birds in the sagebrush. No wonder birders come from all over the continent to the Okanagan to add to their life lists. Every May teams of birders from all over British Columbia participate in the Okanagan Big Day Challenge, competing to see how many kinds of birds they can see in one crazy day in the Okanagan. I was on the team that set the long-standing record of 174 species.
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