Calgary couple's solar-powered apothecary stolen in B.C. - Action News
Home WebMail Wednesday, November 20, 2024, 12:50 AM | Calgary | -9.3°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Calgary

Calgary couple's solar-powered apothecary stolen in B.C.

A solar-powered trailer belonging to a Calgary-based company that crafts natural skin care products has gone missing in B.C., with $50,000 worth of property inside, and priceless hand-picked plants and proprietary recipes.

Trailer filled with foraged plants goes missing from Tsawwassen ferry terminal

Raphaelle Gagnon, owner of Boreal Folk Apothecary, is especially upset about having all her hand-picked wild flowers and plants stolen from her mobile business. (Borealfolk/Instagram)

LATEST UPDATE:Mobile apothecary business gets birthday blessing after stolen trailer recovered in B.C.


Raphaelle Gagnon says her mobile apothecary was stolen over the weekend from the long-term parking lot of the Tsawwassen ferry terminal in Delta, B.C., while she was selling her wares at a craft market in Victoria.

Gagnonsays there was about $50,000 worth of property inside a raft, two bicycles, two motorbikes, cacao butter, essential oils and "hundreds of wild plants" foraged over the last year from across Canada.

"We go out and we pick wild plants for their cosmetic properties, and we create all of our goods in our off-grid solar powered lab, which was a converted trailer that we worked very hard to build," Gagnon told the Calgary Eyeopener.

"All of my notes, all of my books, my recipes everything was in the trailer and just like that, it's just vanished into thin air."

Gagnon says all of the chains and locks on her mobile natural skin care business were cut using power tools. (Boreal Folk Apothecary/Facebook)

The owner ofBoreal Folk Apothecary said the thieves were well-prepared because all of the chains and locks were cut off the trailer using power tools.

Gagnon said she and her partner had to leave their mobile business behind because the trailer was too big to park at the craft market that they were selling their wares at over the weekend in downtown Victoria.

"It is a secured parking lot. I called beforehand asking if it was OK to leave a trailer that was unhitched to a vehicle and they said no problem."


Delta police are reviewing surveillance footage from the parking lot of the Tsawwassen ferry terminal.

While Gagnon does have insurance, she's hopeful hermobile business will turn up.

"It's quite useless to anybody else but ourselves," she said.

"We are hoping the [valuables] such as the motorbikes, the printers the things that can be sold quickly are taken, and then our trailer is perhaps just ditched somewhere."

The inside of the Boreal Folk Apothecary trailer. (Boreal Folk Apothecary)


With files from the Calgary Eyeopener