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New Trails, Old Views: A Walk Through Fairy Glen

9/17/2021

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Before Winegarden Park or Brothers Park there was “Fairy Glen”, more commonly referred to as the Glen. It was a popular picnic area enjoyed by locals, summer complaints and cattle alike, but until recently, the Glen was no longer the community gathering space that it was 100 years ago. According to The West Howe Sound Story, during the 1920s “the Glen was a lovely secluded picnic area […] at the north-eastern boundary of the Village of Gibson’s Landing”. Church services and fundraising events such as summer teas were often held there alongside everyday picnics. It became so common to have these events that the Gibson’s Landing and District Improvement Association installed two large picnic tables there. This lovely spot made such an impression that it was included in a wedding album that Helen McCall gave to Mary Fletcher, alongside other favourite spots about town such as Gibsons Landing, Dougall Point and the Howe Sound School. 
Picture
Photo #2940 from the Sunshine Coast Museum Archives. "The Creek in the Glen" Taken by Helen McCall, circa 1930.
Although the popularity of the Glen faded in the decades since the 1920s it is being revitalized in the 2020s as a trail system. The Town of Gibsons, with the help of many volunteers and a grant from the Vancouver Foundation, has developed a new trail through the area.
Barry Janyk, former Mayor of Gibsons, worked with neighbours to build the new trail following a dispute over property lines. The Heritage Hill Neighbour Association and the Town of Gibsons cleaned up the creek and surrounding area, which had been used as an illegal dumping site, rebuilt the trail and planted a dozen cedars. Janyk, who has lived on the Coast and been involved in community work since 1978, commented that “nothing bonds people like everyone working together on a common goal” and this trail was one such goal. Daniel Tardif, Manager of Maintenance and Operations at Town of Gibsons, also spoke about the effort that the project took as it required a geo-technician, biologist and trail designer to evaluate the area. Michel Frenette was heralded by Janyk as a "master trail builder" and was instrumental in the planning and building of the trail. ​
Picture
Photo #128 The wooden bridge over the Glen at the boundary between Gibsons Landing and the Checkwelp Indian Reserve in 1911.
The Glen, as it was remembered by Stanley Trueman in one of the Museum’s oral history recordings, “comes out just where the highway leaves the village. At that time, it wasn’t as thickly treed as it is now”. The new trail, which has not been officially named yet, is in this same location, with an entrance right next to the sign for the Town of Gibsons. The trail is not very long, and is made up of a leisurely couple hundred metres that wind along Gibson Creek. The old wooden bridge is no longer there and the pathway is maintained by the town and the neighbourhood rather than the free-range cattle “that roamed at large” and “kept the grass well grazed” in the 1920s. And yet the area has kept its secluded allure.
​
When asked about future projects, Tardif mentioned working on other local rights of way that need to be improved upon to make them more accessible. Signage for these trails will also be created, which is not only good for helping people find these paths, but also in clarifying property lines and educating people about the heritage of the area. That is something we at the Museum are particularly fond of. While the trail through Fairy Glen waits to be named, it will be exciting to see the area become a community gathering space once again.
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