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  • My Own Private Island

    MY OWN PRIVATE ISLAND
    Dick Loomer

    Globe and Mail
    Thursday, Aug. 20, 2009 02:53AM EDT

    All I had to do was ask and Swishwash was mine. The NCC let me be
    its keeper, and I've got a cap to prove it

    .I'm 70 years old, happily married, partially retired from orthopedic
    surgery and I have my own island.

    The island actually belongs to the Nature Conservancy of Canada,
    but they are kind enough to let me look after it for them, what you
    might call the "island keeper" (they call it a steward). NCC even
    provided me with a baseball cap with their logo.

    My (our) island is named Swishwash and, although completely wild, it
    is located in the middle arm of the Fraser River only 15 kilometres
    from downtown Vancouver, 300 metres from Richmond, B.C., and one
    kilometre from the south runway of Vancouver International Airport.

    In 1895, a salmon cannery was built on pilings on the island, which
    was mostly sandbar and marsh. The cannery soon became economically
    nonviable and was purchased and consolidated into British Columbia
    Packers Ltd. The buildings burned down but the pilings remain
    protruding above the water, except at high tide, where they lurk
    awaiting my kayak.

    In the 1950s, when the Fraser River was dredged to facilitate
    oceangoing traffic, the dredgings were piled upon the sandbar, putting
    it 3 to 4 metres above the highest tides. In 1999, B.C. Packers
    donated the island to the NCC.

    I had kayaked and windsurfed around Swishwash for several years when
    I learned it had been given to the NCC. I enquired if they needed a
    caretaker and they kindly allowed me to be its steward.

    Swishwash's 29 hectares are divided into eastern, central and western
    portions by tidal flooding of lowlands. The island and its surrounding
    estuary are home to a wide diversity of waterfowl, including some
    50,000 snow geese that spend the winter or migrate through on their
    way from Alaska and Russia to points south. A family of bald eagles
    spends the winter hunting from a tall cottonwood tree. The reedy tidal
    waters are also temporary home to millions of juvenile salmon migrating
    down the Fraser, where they spend months acclimating to the salt water.

    Mammalian life includes a group of 100 or so harbour seals, a family
    of river otters, several coyotes, an occasional raccoon and one
    lone beaver who, as near as I can determine, made a brief visit,
    found insufficient trees to his liking and departed.

    My main duty is to try to control the non-native or invasive species
    of plants growing on the island and plant native trees, mostly Sitka
    spruce, western red cedar, Douglas fir and cottonwood. Controlling
    non-native species sounded like a fairly straightforward task until
    some modest effort brought me face to face with the two most prolific
    and pervasive plants nature has yet devised: Scotch broom and Himalayan
    blackberry.

    For starters both are travelling with forged passports. Scotch broom
    actually originated from around the Mediterranean Sea and Himalayan
    blackberry from Armenia. The story of the transport of broom to North
    America is somewhat controversial. The principal culprit seems to be
    an Englishman who brought it from Hawaii to the Pacific Northwest to
    decorate his garden with its abundant bright yellow flowers.

    The blackberry's journey is a bit more obscure. It was introduced to
    Europe in 1835 and North America in 1885 because of its sweet black
    fruit. Unfortunately, when turned loose on poor, unsuspecting North
    America, its survival and proliferating skills were too much for the
    fertile soil and abundant rainfall, especially on the west coast,
    and they can now be found on most patches of untended ground in
    Southwest B.C., including "my" island.

    One broom plant can produce 50,000 seeds per year, which are ejected
    3 metres when the pod "pops" and hide in the soil for up to 60 years
    (waiting for me to die) before germination. Blackberries can reproduce
    three ways: by seeds within their delicious berries, which make great
    wine; by growing rhizomes beneath the ground which, when dug up,
    resemble a plant from a horror movie; or by stalks or canes that are
    covered with sharp barbs and bend over so the tip embeds itself in
    the earth to start a new plant. You can see I have my post-retirement
    work planned for the next 50 years. I'm currently training my son
    and granddaughter to the task.

    The job is, for me, pure pleasure. I load my kayak, paddle, life jacket
    and hoe, drive to the south side of the airport and park next to the
    Coast Guard station. They keep their eye on the island and shoo off
    any visitors. The first several times I went they tried to kick me
    off until NCC provided me with my jaunty cap to verify my status as
    official caretaker.

    With the hoe (sometimes shovel or rake) loaded in the kayak, I paddle
    the 200 metres to the island, taking care to avoid the float planes
    taking off from the airport's south terminal as they buzz overhead
    on their way to Victoria or up the B.C. coast. I often wave to them
    and wonder if they wonder, "What is that old geezer doing wandering
    around on that bushy sandbar?" And, when I arrive home three hours
    later, my wife asks the same question.

    Dick Loomer lives in Vancouver.
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