Couple's kayak trip traces 200-year-old Spanish route down Vancouver Island coast - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 12:13 AM | Calgary | -11.5°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
British Columbia

Couple's kayak trip traces 200-year-old Spanish route down Vancouver Island coast

Two British Columbia kayakers are set to depart Sunday from a remote Vancouver Island beach known as Rugged Point for a month-long voyage retracing the routeSpanishexplorers took in the late 1700s.

Pair expects to reach Tofino in about a month

Jacqueline Windh and her husband Dave Gilbert are shown in a handout photo supplied by Windh. (Jacqueline Windh/Canadian Press)

Two British Columbia kayakers are set to depart Sunday from a remote Vancouver Island beach known as Rugged Pointfor a month-long voyage retracing the passageSpanishexplorers took in the late 1700s.

Jacqueline Windh, a fellow of the Royal Canadian Geographical Society, and her husband, Dave Gilbert, plan to hike and kayak the now virtually uninhabited outer coastal areas of Vancouver Island.

Most Canadians are aware of Canada's British and French colonial history, but theSpanishconnections aren't as well-known despite many West Coast islands, communities and waterways bearingSpanishnames, said Windh.

She pointed to Cortez, Galiano, Gabriola islands, the Strait of Juan de Fuca, and even Port Alberni, where she lives, as places on Vancouver Island named afterSpanishexplorers and dignitaries.

Jacqueline Windh in the waters off of Tofino, B.C. (Jacqueline Windh)

"I had no idea there was even aSpanishpresence here,'' said Windh, who arrived in B.C. from Ontario in the 1990s. "I thought it was weird, all theSpanishnames here. But theSpanishwere here before Capt. Cook. Spain and England almost came to war over this new territory.''

Spanishships arrived on the outer coastal areas of Vancouver Island in the 1770s before the British, she said, adding they were searching for trade routes.

Jacqueline Windh and Dave Gilbert assembling their folding kayaks on a previous trip at Megin Lake, B.C.. Windh said they'll be using the same folding kayaks on their trip. (Jacqueline Windh)

Windh said she's calling her voyage "The Secret Coast'' and it received support from theSpanishEmbassy in Canada, which highlighted the expedition on its arts and culture website.

"The order we're going, north to south, it's kind of roughly chronological with the history of the earlySpanishencounters,'' said Windh, who estimates the entire trip will cover about 220 kilometres.

A float plane will take the couple to Rugged Point, where they will begin their journey hiking and kayaking along the Tatchu Peninsula, located on the northwest coast of Vancouver Island. The nearest community is Zeballos, almost 500 kilometres northwest of Victoria.

Windh said once the expedition reaches the southern end of the Tatchu Peninsula a boat will take them to Nootka Island and the Hesquiat Peninsula, where they will make stops at Indigenous whaling communities and villages that are now almost completely uninhabited.

"We probably won't see anyone who's living there for the first two weeks we're out,'' she said.

Jacqueline Windh and her husband, Dave Gilbert, on Nootka Island in 2017. (Jacqueline Windh)

Last stop: Tofino

Windh said she and her husband plan to stop at Homais Cove where theSpanishship Santiago arrived in 1774 and first traded with Indigenous people. They will also explore the Nootka Island whaling site British explorer Capt. James Cook called Friendly Cove in 1778 after arriving there and interacting with the local Nuu-chah-nulth people, she said.

TheSpanishbuilt a fort on Nootka Island and after more than 15 years of tensions and negotiations between Britain and Spain over who would control the territory, the two countries reached the Nootka Accord in 1794, which turned the area over to the British and averted war, said Windh.

Windh and Gilbert on Nootka Island. Windh said the couple has visited some places on their route before, but have never done the trip in full. (Jacqueline Windh)

The final leg of the expedition involves paddling southward along the outer coast towardTofino, she said. The expedition will stop at Flores Island, named after aSpanishviceroy, and home of the Nuu-chah-nulth Indigenous villages of Ahousaht and Opitsaht.

Windh said she and her husband plan to arrive at Chesterman Beach in Tofino on July 8. She noted Tofino, now a popular tourist town on the west side of Vancouver Island, is also aSpanishname.

She said the legacy of the 18th centurySpanishexpeditions to Canada's Pacific West Coast is one of the shared history of both countries. The expedition aims to raise awareness of a nearly forgotten period of history between Canada and Spain, she said.