Tahsis Living

Tahsis is a remote village on the west coast of Vancouver Island. With only 400 residents, we don't have many of the conveniences of larger towns but we do have community spirit and lots to do in our spectacularly wild and beautiful environment.

Wednesday, 26 February 2020

Artwork returned to families generations after pieces were purchased













Tsaxana, BC — 
His voice shaking with emotion, Frank Collins unpacked a large blue tote before a crowd on a winter evening at the Mowachaht/Muchalaht First Nation’s House of Unity. The 81-year-old removed a wooden mask and woven basket, two fixtures in his home for generations, handing them to the descendants of the artisans who created and sold the pieces several decades ago.
For Collins as well as the family members of late Mowachaht/Muchalaht carver Ambrose Howard and weaver Lillian Michael from the Nuchatlaht First Nation, the Feb. 23 event represented a homecoming for the pieces when they returned to the families that created them. This became a necessary gesture for the Tahsis resident since his wife Lucille, who collected First Nations art for most of her life, passed nearly four years ago.
“I’ve already donated three pieces to the Tahsis museum,” said Collins of works that include a small Ambrose Howard mask, a print by Sanford Williams and another basket by Lillian Michael. “We had it in our will if we passed together that all of our native art was going to go to the Campbell River museum.”
As the president of the Tahsis Salmon Enhancement Society, Collins is in regular contact with the Mowchaht/Muchalaht First Nation. His desire to send the pieces somewhere other than a museum intensified after hearing from the First Nation’s fisheries manager Kadin Snook that a permanent space for such artwork could be developing in the future.
“Kadin mentioned something about a culture centre here,” said Collins. “We decided that it should come here.”
Part of Lucille’s collection was a large number of woven cedar baskets, including the recently repatriated Lillian Michael piece that was purchased in the 1970s when the couple lived in Gold River. The mask was bought in the late 1960s, but Collins believes it was made during the previous decade when Ambrose Howard still lived in Yuquot, on the southern tip of Nootka Island.
As a child William Howard recalls his productive father honing the craft in his workshop while they lived in the ancient Mowachaht village.   
“Every time I went in there he was sitting in there carving,” said Howard, whose father passed the craft on to him when Ambrose wasn’t selling pieces to interested buyers from around the world.
Even before the family moved to Gold River in the 1960s when the Mowachaht/Muchalaht reserve was translocated by the federal government, Howard would see visitors coming to their home in the remote Yuquot community to buy his father’s masks.
“They would come in and I’d never know where they were from,” he said.
Howard chuckles that his father once made a mask for him, an undertaking that took four to five months due to the constant demand for Ambrose’s product. A few times the father even took the work in progress off the wall to satisfy another eager customer, only to start his son’s mask over again.
“He wasn’t finished theirs so he would take mine, and he’d start making another one. He did that about three times,” admitted Howard. “He told me one time that when he first started carving it was - in my words - therapy, until he started selling it.”
Originally from Newfoundland, Collins has been a resident in Vancouver Island’s west coast communities since 1963. While Ambrose Howard and Lillian Michael were spreading their pieces through the world, Collins worked in industries that helped establish Gold River and Tahsis, often working alongside families represented at the event in the House of Unity.
“I worked at the old beach camp before the town was even built,” he said of his role in Gold River’s origins.
His ties to the families of these small communities on the northwest of Vancouver Island led to returning the mask and basket, amid plans among the Mowachaht/Muchalaht First Nation to eventually have the artwork on display.
“I was offered $5,000 for that mask,” said Collins of a pitch from a private American collector. “I didn’t want it hanging on a wall in Seattle. It had to come here - $5,000 wouldn’t have made me rich, but giving that there tonight made me very rich.”
“I think that was the biggest part of it; bringing it home, because I love these people,” he continued. “They’ve always been good to me, and they’ve always respected me.”
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Family nature club event #1

You’ve seen the cob oven in Jess’s yard and you’ve always been curious.























 Now you have a chance to see it in action.
To start the Family Nature Club season, Jess Jackson the leader is hosting a pizza party. It will take place on Saturday, February 29 from 3:00 - 5:00 at the picnic tables by the Fish Processing Plant.

Families can sign up by contacting the Hub at viwhub@viw.sd84.bc.ca or 250-283-7108. There will be no cost to families.

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Fall Prevention Course
























Island Health, BCEHS and the Village of Tahsis are teaming up to offer a one-day fall prevention course this spring. The course is intended for seniors, but is open to all members of the public. If you are interested in attending, please call the rec centre (250-934-6443) after 2 pm any day and let us know which dates you could attend.

April 7
April 28
May 12
May 26

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Tuesday, 25 February 2020

Health centre March schedule


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Crib Night

















Cribbage Night will be Friday, February 28th starting at 6:30pm at the Seniors Centre. 
Everyone welcome. 
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Sunday, 23 February 2020

CMESS musical

Students from CMESS performed the Missoula musical The Tortoise versus the Hare”.  All students K to 12 were invited to participate. Congratulations on a fine performance.








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By-election results

Cheryl Northcott 73 votes
Rita Aedan           39 votes

Thanks to both for running.
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Thursday, 20 February 2020

CMESS public consultation


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Wednesday, 19 February 2020

Climbing wall celebration


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Tuesday, 18 February 2020

CMESS’s Missoula Theatre show

We would hope that all community members will come out and enjoy the hour long show! Saturday at 4pm, doors open at 3:45


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Family Nature Club returns


































Families can sign up by contacting the Hub at viwhub@viw.sd84.bc.ca or 250-283-7108. There will be no cost to families.
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Monday, 17 February 2020

Need a ride to the poll?



















Contact me by email Olson.stephanie2009@gmail.com and I’ll give you a ride on Saturday, February 22.
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Dinner special before trivia night on February 20

Stuffed chicken
Potatoes
Vegetable
Salad
$16
Please call 6232 to make a reservation.
Or you can order off the menu.
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Sunday, 16 February 2020

Add caption

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The mysterious candidate strikes again.

Candidate withdraws from regional district byelection

Remaining candidate in by acclamation
  • Feb. 12, 2020 12:00 a.m.
  • NEWS
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Houston resident Chris Newell will be the next director, by acclamation, for the Houston rural area on the Regional District of Bulkley-Nechako (RDBN board of directors.
The move came last week after the only other candidate, Stephen Miller, asked to remove his name from the ballot.
But that request, made Feb. 5, needed the approval of the municipal affairs and housing minister because it was made after the deadline to do so had passed.
“Mr. Miller indicated in his correspondence to us that his withdrawal was for ‘private reasons’,” said RDBN chief administrative officer Curtis Helgesen.
“Section 101(1) of the local government act allows withdrawal up until 4 p.m. on the 29th day before general voting – in this case, January 31st. Section 101(2) allows withdrawal after that date subject to the approval of the minister.”
That approval came Feb. 6.
Miller would have been a non-resident candidate as he provided a Victoria address on his nomination papers.
The Houston rural seat, which incorporates a wide swath of the area, ranging up to Granisle, had been held by Rob Newell, father to Chris Newell, until his death late last year.
Rob Newell was first elected in 2011 and his re-election in Oct. 2018 would have been his third term as a regional director. His son will now fill the remainder of the term.
And while the regional district spent last week sorting out its byelection situation, something very similar happened last month in Tahsis, a small community on the west coast of Vancouver Island.
Like the regional district, Tahsis also required a bylelection and, like the regional district, scheduled one for this month.
Three people submitted nomination papers, two local residents and a third person identified as a Stephen Adrian Miller of Victoria.
All three were declared candidates on Jan. 7 but when Village of Tahsis employee Janet St. Denis, who also acts as the Village’s chief election officer, probed further, discrepancies concerning Miller began to emerge.
“I did not recognize any of the names,” said St. Denis of the required nominators on Miller’s nomination papers.
“In reviewing the addresses of his nominators, I recognized several of the addresses but the names did not match the people who I believed to live at these addresses,” she said.
“I proceeded to call several of property owners who verified it to be true that they did not have the person named on the nomination documents living at their residence.”
In order to be qualified as a nominator, a person must be an elector of the municipality or electoral area for which the nomination is made.
The Village of Tahsis then challenged Mr. Miller’s nomination in provincial court in Victoria on Jan. 24 with the court declaring Mr. Miller was no longer a candidate.
St. Denis, who was the main contact with Miller, said he gave no indication as to why he wanted to become a candidate for the village council post.
A statement from the municipal affairs ministry did not include the name of Stephen Miller, but did confirm it was contacted by the regional district “about receiving a signed withdrawal notice from a candidate whose candidacy in a different byelection was challenged and upheld by the court in the Village of Tahsis by-election.”

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Saturday, 15 February 2020

Ubedam Theatre Trivia Night

Santosh will have a dinner special. 50/50 draw. The same team has won the first two nights. They need more competition. Ruth Russell will be the quiz master for this night.

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Thursday, 13 February 2020

Nautical Breeze Gift Shop

New local artisans products at Nautical Breeze Hair & Wellness Salon. Next to the Post Office in Tahsis. Jewelry, Purses, Bath Bombs, T-shirts, Knitted hats and more... They also have gift certificates! Open Tue-Wed-Thu 9am-4pm or call for an appointment 250-710-4375 Sue or Janice 250-608-3770. (open most Saturdays by appointment) Try their tanning bed - just in time to warm up those chilly winter days!






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Wednesday, 12 February 2020

Advance Poll Today

Advance poll voting for the Tahsis Councillor position today.
Everyone's vote is important so add your input! 8am-8pm at the village office. Don't forget to bring 2 pieces of ID, one with a signature.
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Sally’s Grill breakfast special

VALENTINE’S MORNING

BENNY FLORENTINE OR 
BLUEBERRY PANCAKES WITH TWO EGGS AND TWO BACON. 
Opening at 10:00 am.

$9.95
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Monday, 10 February 2020

Valentine’s Party


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Fishing BC video about Nootka Sound Adventures

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i5XHvFy7uTM&app=desktop
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Sunday, 9 February 2020

Online property tax deferment form



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Saturday, 8 February 2020

Highway Work


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Valentine’s Day dinner specials



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Friday, 7 February 2020

Sally’s Grill reopening schedule

SALLYS GRILL WILL BE OPENING WITH LIMITED HOURS (10:00-2:00) ON FRIDAY FEB. 7TH. WE ARE TAKING RESERVATIONS FOR VALENTINE’S DINNER NOW TIL THE 11TH OF FEB.    

PLEASE CALL 778-344-1488
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Cheryl Northcott's candidate statement

Photo by Ley Langford

1. What made you decide to run in this election? I believe in democracy. And in order for there to be democracy, there must be more than one qualified candidate. That doesn't mean that I'm not serious. It just means that I had been considering running for some time, but was willing to hold back in the event that there were more qualified candidates ready to step in.
2.What part of your background (experience, education, skills etc.) would make you a good person in this office?
I spent the better part of my five years at BCIT as a union shop steward. A role that requires the ability to listen, negotiate, play well with others, yet stand up to authority when necessary.
3. What is the most important issue facing Tahsis and what will you do to address it
A safe, well maintained road. It is crucial for overcoming almost every other important issue facing Tahsis. Continued pressure on the provincial government for improvements as well as on the maintenance contractor to provide a safer level of service to the road is the obvious course of action. As a member of council, I would be ready and able to explore and implement additional strategies.

Cheryl’s website
 https://cherylnorthcott.wixsite.com/tahsis

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Thursday, 6 February 2020

Read Throughs for spring play



Ubedam Theatre
Read Through for spring plays
Wednesday, February 12 2-4
and
Thursday, February 13 2-4

Upstairs at the Oceanview Cafe
The play requires 4 female actors and one stage assistant who will prompt actors during rehearsals.
If you have any questions, call 6236.

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Meet and greet








There are two candidates running in the February 22nd by-election for Tahsis councillor - Rita Aedan and Cheryl Northcott.

Rita will be at the senior centre on Monday, February 10 from 1:00-3:00.
Cheryl will be there on Wednesday, February 12 from 1:00-3:00.

All voters are invited to come to talk to them in order to know them better.
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Wednesday, 5 February 2020

Rita Aedan's candidate statement


1. What made you decide to run in this election?

The simplicity of deciding to run for the vacant councillor’s position within the community of Tahsis is partially based in having lived on the eastern side of Vancouver Island, witnessing the lack of protection for community watersheds, living through five years of drought conditions and watershed damage…a situation that must not happen to Tahsis…while struggling along with the hard-working association of community groups, to get positive outcomes from the Provincial government.

Combined with this reason is the overarching love of place that I have for Tahsis and  surrounding environs.  From the first time as a teenager when I visited Friendly Cove, Nootka Island where my Grandfather, Arthur Swanson, was the keeper of the light, I knew that this place was and is like no other on earth.  The raw beauty of Tahsis has captured my heart and soul and, as such, I have determined to give my all in standing up for the irreplaceable.

As a friend whom I worked with while Chairperson for the South Wellington/Cedar/North Oyster community group, acronym CAPPS, recently wrote to me:  “Time has been waiting for you to do this Rita.”  Time waits no longer!



2, What part of your background (experience, education, skills etc.) would make you a good person in this office?

My Secular Work Experience along with Community/Environmental activism/involvement is as follows:

Work Experience                                                     

Head of Current Accounts, CIBC                                
Assistant Manager, Nanaimo Real Estate Co.             
Assistant Manager, Greater Nanaimo                         
Chamber of Commerce/Tourist Bureau                       
Manager, Nanaimo Construction Association             
Band Secretary, Stn’uminus First Nation                    
Office Manager, Nanaimo Crane Company 

Community/Environmental Activism
Writer – Victoria Street News - Monthly Column
Chairperson – Citizens Advocating for Public Process & Sustainability – Protecting Community Aquifer 
President – North Oyster/Diamond Ratepayers Association
Member – Vancouver Island Water Watch Coalition (10 years)
Member – Nootka Sound Watershed Society
Member – McKelvie Matters – Citizen signed Petition to stop Logging in McKelvie Old Growth Forest & Tahsis Community Watershed - Petition presented to BC Legislative Assembly October 2019
Vice-President – Tahsis Community Garden Society

In supporting the Unique Spirit of Tahsis I will utilize my experience by working in harmony with the Official Community Plan, supporting the transition to an eco-tourism based economy, supporting the Tahsis to Zeballos Trail to its successful conclusion, work in harmony of purpose with the Mowachaht/Muchalaht First Nation and, above all else, work to save the McKelvie Old Growth Forest and our community watershed from logging through the removal of the McKelvie and environs from TFL 19.  

3. What is the most important issue facing Tahsis and what will you do to address it?

Of utmost importance is the saving/protecting of our McKelvie Creek Old Growth forest, surrounding environs and habitat during this time of global climate change.  As an ATV owner, I have driven through logging areas and witnessed first-hand the utter desecration of unrestricted logging practices, the residual garbage left behind and the disrespectful to devastating damage done to the environment.   

Currently, BC taxpayers pay a carbon tax each and every time we pull up to a gas pump while minus common sense Old Growth forests, acting as carbon sinks, are logged.  “Old growth forests accumulate carbon for centuries and contain large quantities of it.  We expect, however, that much of this carbon…will move back to the atmosphere if these forests are disturbed.”  Link to article below.
(PDF) Old-growth forests as global carbon sinks - ResearchGate

It has now been recognized that trees are of more value standing than cut down.  For this reason and more, I have chosen to dedicate my time and experience in working to protect our environmental guardians…the trees of The McKelvie along with the earth that sustains us all.  For those who say jobs, jobs, jobs, I reply with…no earth, no jobs.

Therefore, I will encourage new, innovative ideas to grow our community successfully while leaving behind the same old, same old.

Bringing ideas/suggestions forward on practical community adaptation & planning during this time of Global Climate Change.

Will encourage support for local small business…working together…Tahsis locals first!

With dedication and purpose, I look forward to serving the people of Tahsis.

Rita Aedan

                      

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Tuesday, 4 February 2020

Crib night at Senior Centre

Friday, February 7, 6:30
Free snacks, tea and coffee
Pop $1
Everyone welcome
If there is a good turnout, this could become a regular event.


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Monday, 3 February 2020

Community Garden events

Tahsis Community Garden


Upcoming Events
WORK PARTY - SATURDAY, FEB 8 @ 10 AM, GARDEN
  • Hauling brush:  previously cleared by Kim and Cheryl  
  • Perimeter care:  help with clearing brambles from the west side fence.  
  • Tools to bring:  loppers, pruners, small chain saw
  • Much appreciated: pickup truck to haul brush to the dump

GENERAL MEETING - MONDAY, FEB 10 @ 7 PM
(venue to be confirmed)
  • Spring Mailout:  Membership Drive, Seedy Sunday
  • Comox Strathcona Waste Management:  Tahsis Composting Pilot Project
  • Grant Application:  2020 Scotts Gro for Good

ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING - SEEDY SUNDAY
MARCH 8TH, 2-4 PM @ TAHSIS SENIORS CTR

BIG shout out to all members, 
every contribution made in sustaining 
a Community Garden in Tahsis 
is appreciated beyond words.  

Image result for volunteer appreciation"

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