Skatin

Skatin
Skookumchuk
Village
Skatin First Nations
Nickname(s): Skatin Nation
Coordinates: 50°4′0″N 122°41′6″W / 50.06667°N 122.68500°W / 50.06667; -122.68500Coordinates: 50°4′0″N 122°41′6″W / 50.06667°N 122.68500°W / 50.06667; -122.68500
Country  Canada
Province  British Columbia
Region Fraser Valley
Skatin First Nations 562
GovernmentSection 11 Band, Election System:Custom Electoral System
  Type Elected Band Council
  Governing body Band Council
  Chief Williams, Patrick
Population (2011)
  Village 105
  Density 41/km2 (105/sq mi)
  Urban 105
  Metro 105
Time zone PST
  Summer (DST) PDT (UTC)
Postal code V0N
Area code(s) N/A
Website www.inshuckch.com/skatin.html

Skatin is a village of under 100 persons in Skatin First Nations,[1] aka the Skatin Nations,[2] a Band Government of the larger Band of the In-SHUCK-ch Nation, part of the St'at'imc people who are also referred to as Lower Stl'atl'imx. Skatin, the official new name, reverts to the traditional pre-colonial/pre-Columbian name. The alternate past name still commonly used by outsiders, Skookumchuck, is the St'at'imcets version of the Chinook Jargon Skookumchuck, meaning Strong Waters, i.e. rapids. The town site is 4 km south of T'sek Hot Spring (alt. spelling T'sik Hot Spring), formerly named both Saint Agnes Well and Skookumchuck Hot Springs. The community is 28 km south of the outlet of Lillooet Lake on the east side of the Lillooet River. It is approximately 75 km south of the town of Pemberton and the large reserve of the Lil'wat branch of the St'at'imc at Mount Currie, British Columbia. See Skatin First Nations for details about the complicated Band(s) structure.

Skatin is geographically an extension of both the Pemberton and Harrison Valleys, but by legal fiction is officially part of the Fraser Valley for Provincial and Federal administrative purposes.

Population

Skatin community includes about 30 houses, a church, band office, fire hall, a new school and gymnasium built in 2003. The population living at Skatin is 65 at the town site, which varies according to season; 74 on other Reserves; and 275 off Reserves;[3] the majority living in the Fraser Valley and lower mainland, including Vancouver.

Language

The Skatin First Nations speak Ucwalmícwts/Lower St̓át̓imc: fluent speakers: 7, understand or speak somewhat: 51, learning speakers: 51.[4]

European Contact

The town church was built by members of the Douglas, Skatin and Samahquam Bands between 1895 and 1906. The Oblate Fathers established a mission there and encouraged the native people in the surrounding wilderness to settle there. The Missionary Oblates of Mary Immaculate instructed the natives in Christianity, and to this day the Church of the Holy Cross, Skatin, stands as a stunning example of the North American architectural style known as Carpenter Gothic/Wood Gothic. In 1981, the church was designated as a National Historic Site by Heritage Canada. A community-based group, Ama Liisaos Heritage Trust Society, is working on conservation of the church. Prominent features are the simple but elegant stained glass windows, consisting of a checkerboard pattern of bright red mercuric glass and alternating bright blue cobalt glass squares. The glass was imported from Europe and brought in by mule, by a gold prospector who had struck it rich in the Cariboo Gold Rush, on his return to the goldfields.

The Gold Rush Era

See also: Pemberton, British Columbia

In 1858 the Fraser Canyon Gold Rush began and some 30,000 miners began the trek through traditional Lil'wat and upper St'at'imc territory to the goldfields at Lillooet, then known as Cayoosh Flat Trail.

Flood control

See also: Vessels of the Lakes Route & Pemberton, British Columbia

In 1947 the Pemberton Dyking District, for flood control in the adjacent Pemberton Valley, lowered Lillooet Lake, permanently altering the character of the rapids and the water level in the Lillooet River. Conversely, Little Lillooet Lake earlier was raised by the Royal Engineers in their improvements to the route to the gold fields, turning it into a lower arm of Lillooet Lake proper, eliminating the portage and resulting in moving south the former Port Lillooet - down to what had been the south end of Little Lillooet Lake.

Telephone service

There are no landlines or cellular service in the area; radio telephones and satellite phones only. First Nations, loggers, roadbuilders and government officials all rely extensively on the use of VHF radios.

Electricity

Ironically, though adjacent to high tension power lines for more than half a decade, Skatin was not connected to the grid until January 2011, when BC Hydro crews disconnected the community diesel generating station.[5]

Agriculture

There were several native and European homesteads with mixed farms with livestock, small orchards, groves of nut trees including hazels (C. avellana and C. sieboldiana) and filberts (C. maxima), walnuts and Northern pecans, and small vineyards ranging from three to 15 acres. These farms were very abundant because of rich alluvial soils in a sheltered valley system that runs in a general East-West direction, so the north shore of the river and lake have full sun year round and minimal shading. The waters also moderate the climate toward more temperate conditions with warm summer nights: i.e. able to grow tree fruits: peaches and apricots as the Okanagan Valley and Niagara Peninsula, and traditionally almonds such as fleshy almond/Northern almond/Hungarian almond var. Balaton/sweet kernel apricot (Prunus armeniaca var. Balaton).[6] Oral tradition holds that BC Hydro removed (or stole) the soil from all the farms along and south of Lillooet Lake, for building the service road used to install the high tension power lines to feed California.

Several raised vegetable beds have been successfully started at the nearby hot springs. Discussions have been begun about using the geothermal source for district heating and greenhouses. The area has the potential to supply all temperate fruit and hothouse needs extending to Whistler. [7]

Transportation

There are no rail or public transit buses, though there is a daily school bus for children. The Band maintains mini-buses for transport of seniors and others needing medical and other services in and beyond Pemberton.

Roads

Work is slowly proceeding on the 7 Nations Highway re-connecting Harrison Hot Springs with Pemberton. The last 20 miles at the head of Harrison Lake leading to Port Douglas are in very poor repair ever since the sawmill closed at Port Douglas, around 1995. Work on the Harrison Lake section was disrupted by the Wood Lake Wildfire in summer 2015.[8] The westernmost section of road was improved in the spring of 2015; In-SHUCK-ch Forest Service Road/FSR was widened from 1 to 1½ lanes to 2 lanes and two ½-lane shoulders (3 lanes in toto) for the length of Lillooet Lake. Drivers are advised to take a basic back-roads tool kit including flares, flashlights, shovel, jacks, tire iron, at least 1 spare tire (2 is better), water for people and vehicle, refillable water cans, and several cans of run flat aerosols to re-inflate tires. In the winter, add an axe, shovel, studs and/or chains/other traction devices to the list. Check latest updates before heading out.[9]

Air

There are charter helicopter flights, weather/visibility permitting. The closest airport is Pemberton Regional Airport. Seaplanes can be chartered out of Whistler/Green Lake Water Aerodrome and "land" nearby at the south end of Lillooet Lake.

Education

The elementary and junior high school (grades K-9), known as the Head of the Lake School, is for the children of In-SHUCK-ch members, the majority of which are from Skatin and Tipella. 44 students currently attend this school.[10]

The Xit'olacw School in Xit'olacw Village (Mount Currie New Site) has 244 students, grades K-12.[11]

School District 48 Sea to Sky operates public schools in Pemberton.

Conseil scolaire francophone de la Colombie-Britannique operates one Francophone primary school in Pemberton: école de la Vallée-de-Pemberton.[12]

References

  1. Archived June 21, 2015, at the Wayback Machine.
  2. "First Nation Detail". Pse5-esd5.ainc-inac.gc.ca. 2014-08-26. Retrieved 2015-11-03.
  3. "Aboriginal Affairs and Northern Development Canada : Registered Population : Skatin Nations" (PDF). Pse5-esd5.ainc-inac.ca. Retrieved 2015-11-03.
  4. "Skatin Nations". Maps.fphlcc.ca. Retrieved 2015-11-02.
  5. "GRID Connection : Project Update : BC Hydro Remote Community Electrification Program" (PDF). Inshuckch.com. January 2011. Retrieved 2015-11-03.
  6. "The Almond and the Sweet Kernel Apricot". Songonline.ca. Retrieved 2015-11-02.
  7. "Tree Nut Species, Varieties and Cultivars for Canada". Treenuts.ca. Retrieved 2015-11-02.
  8. Tarannum, Farah. "Public access restricted near Harrison Lake wildfire". Globalnews.ca. Retrieved 2015-11-02.
  9. "Road Information - Sea to Sky District - Ministry of Forests, Lands and Natural Resource Operations - Province of British Columbia". For.gov.bc.ca. Retrieved 2015-11-02.
  10. "Xit'olacw Community School Newsletter" (PDF). Lilwat.ca. January 14, 2011. Retrieved 2015-11-03.
  11. "Welcome to the Lil'wat Nation, Mount Currie B.C. - Education, Xit'olacw Community School". Lilwat.ca. Retrieved 2015-11-02.
  12. "Carte des écoles." Conseil scolaire francophone de la Colombie-Britanique. Retrieved on 22 January 2015.

Sources

Further reading

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Skatin.
Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Pemberton (British Columbia).
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/19/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.