South Thormanby Island
{{Short description|Island in British Columbia, Canada}}
{{Use Canadian English|date=January 2023}}
{{coord|name=North Thormanby Island|49|29|10|N|123|58|10|W|region:CA|display=title}}
File:Thormanby Island from air.jpg
South Thormanby Island (sx̱welap in she shashishalhem) is an island off the Sunshine Coast of British Columbia, Canada, located 17 km west of Sechelt, and within the shared territories of the Tla'amin Nation and the shíshálh Nation.
Simson Provincial Park, established in 1986 and named after pioneer Calvert Simson,{{Cite web |title=Simson Park |url=https://bcparks.ca/simson-park/ |access-date=2023-06-05 |website=BC Parks |language=en}} occupies the majority of the southern part of South Thormanby Island. The northern half of the island is predominately private property, with a concentration of seasonal cottages along Buccaneer Bay and Water Bay.{{Citation |last1=Akrigg |first1=G.P.V. |title=British Columbia Place Names |url=https://archive.org/details/britishcolumbiap0000akri_w1q9 |year=1986 |edition=3rd, 1997 |place=Vancouver |publisher=UBC Press |isbn=0-7748-0636-2 |last2=Akrigg |first2=Helen B. |url-access=registration}}
Geography
South Thormanby Island forms part of the Gulf Islands, and is separated from the mainland of the Sunshine Coast by Welcome Passage. At low tide, the island is connected to its neighbour, North Thormanby Island, by a sand bridge.
There are two main hills on the island: Mount Seafield in the south and Spy Glass Hill in the north. South of Mount Seafield, there is a large lake in an area known locally as "The Farm". The south island is much rockier than its northern neighbour. Tattenham Ledge, a long shallow underwater shelf of rock, extends from the northern side of the island and is a hazard to navigation.
There are several small islands attached to South Thormanby island including Pirate Rock and Merry Island (nepshilin in she shashishalhem) to the south.[https://books.google.com/books?id=YEH50xSJedQC&dq=thormanby+tattenham+ledge&pg=PA74 Prostar Sailing Directions 2005 Page 74][http://www.llbc.leg.bc.ca/public/pubdocs/bcdocs/366048/simson_ps.pdf Simson Provincial Park Master Plan. page 10]
Ecology
The Thormanby Islands are located within the Coastal Douglas-fir (CDF) biogeoclimatic zone,https://www.for.gov.bc.ca/ftp/HRE/external/!publish/becmaps/PaperMaps/field/DSC_SunshineCoastResourceDistrict_SouthCoastRegion__field.pdf the smallest and most at-risk of British Columbia's 16 biogeoclimatic zones.{{Cite web |last=Coastal Douglas-fir & Associated Ecosystems Conservation Partnership |date=2022 |title=Conservation Planning in Coastal Douglas-fir Ecosystems: A Quick Guide for Local Government |url=https://www.cdfcp.ca/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/CDFCP_Local_Government_Conservation_Planning_Guide_low_res-2.pdf}} The CDF contains more species at risk than any other biogeoclimatic zone in BC, including 24 globally imperiled species and 282 species that are provincially-listed species at risk, as well as 44 ecological communities at risk. For example, the provincially red-listed Douglas-fir/dull Oregon grape ecological community is dispersed throughout both islands. The grand fir/three-leaved foamflower ecological community, also on the provincial red-list, is found in parts of the north island.{{Cite web |title=BC Species & Ecosystems Explorer |url=https://a100.gov.bc.ca/pub/eswp/ |access-date=2023-06-05 |website=a100.gov.bc.ca}}
A rare coastal sand ecosystem that supports two additional red-listed ecological communities is found along some beaches, including Buccaneer Bay and Vaucroft Beach. These communities are the large-headed sedge ecological community and ''dune wildrye/beach pea ecological community. Additionally, a unique sand plain and salt marsh is found on the south island at Gill Beach. Both water birds and migratory songbirds heavily depend on these habitats for seasonal and year-round nesting, foraging, and refuge during storms and weather events.{{Cite web |last=South Coast Conservation Program |date=2016-03-16 |title=Coastal Sand Ecosystem Management Guidelines: North Thormanby Island, Sunshine Coast, BC |url=http://www.sccp.ca/sites/default/files/species-habitat/documents/North%20Thormanby%20CSE%20guidelines%20march%202016.pdf}}
The interior of the island is heavily forested, with predominantly second-growth Douglas-fir and Western red cedar. Other common tree species include Western hemlock, red alder, arbutus, lodgepole pine, and bigleaf maple. Many edible berries grow in the forest understory, including salal, salmonberry, thimbleberry, red huckleberry, and blackberries (both the native trailing blackberry, and invasive Himalayan blackberry). In marshy areas of the island, bulrushes and swamp grasses may be found.
An estimated population of approximately 300 Columbian black-tailed deer inhabits the islands. Other small animals include mink, raccoons, squirrels, chipmunks, and birds of all sorts. There have also been beavers inhabiting the lake and, in recent memory, black bear and cougar have been sighted on the island, though they are not believed to be presently established.[http://www.llbc.leg.bc.ca/public/pubdocs/bcdocs/366048/simson_ps.pdf Simson Provincial Park Master Plan. page 11,13,27,28] The area is well known for its fishing, especially salmon fishing.
History
South and North Thormanby Islands (together known as sx̱welap in she shashishalhem) are located within the shared territories of the Tla'amin Nation and the shíshálh Nation. The village of klayahkwohss, in what is today known as Buccaneer Bay, served as a primary location for winter dances and ceremonies along with the nearby village of sex̱wʔamin (Garden Bay) to the north.{{Cite web |last=shíshálh Nation |title=lil x̱emit tems swiya nelh mes stutula: A Strategic Land Use Plan for the shíshálh Nation |url=https://shishalh.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/SLUP.pdf}} There are at least five known archaeological shell middens on South Thormanby Island.[http://www.llbc.leg.bc.ca/public/pubdocs/bcdocs/366048/simson_ps.pdf Simson Provincial Park Master Plan. page 31-32]
Spanish naval officer José María Narváez was the first European to visit the islands, which he named "Isla de San Ignacio," on July 12, 1791.McDowell, Jim José Narváez The Forgotten Explorer. Spokane, The Arthur H. Clark Company, 1998. p. 58
The name "Thormanby" was later given to the islands in 1860 by Captain George Henry Richards. This name commemorates the racehorse who won the Epsom Derby that year. Several other place names on the island also commemorate Richards' interest in horse racing. For example, the name Buccaneer Bay honours another race horse who won the Royal Hunt Cup at Ascot in 1861[https://books.google.com/books?id=ETRnNvNStZ8C&dq=thormanby+island+bc&pg=PA148 Pioneer Days in British Columbia. Volume 4. P. 148-149.][https://books.google.com/books?id=9IP4V-Hyt-4C&dq=buccaneer+bay+bc&pg=PA31 British Columbia place names. akrigg, page 31]
In 1892, rights to the majority of land on the island was secured by Calvert Simson, a shopkeeper of the Hastings Mill Store in Gastown, through a crown grant. Around 1912, he cleared the swamp on the southern part of the island to establish a farm and orchard. The farm was later abandoned in 1948 and the original buildings were demolished in the 1960s and 1970s. Some semi-wild apple and cherry trees, remnants of the old orchard, can still be found in this area.[http://www.llbc.leg.bc.ca/public/pubdocs/bcdocs/366048/simson_ps.pdf Simson Provincial Park Master Plan. page 11, 16, 31, 33]
During the 1920s and 1930s, the Union Steamship Company constructed a float in Buccaneer Bay and made regular trips to the island from Vancouver. At this time, trails were constructed throughout the island and the various bays were named.[http://www.llbc.leg.bc.ca/public/pubdocs/bcdocs/366048/simson_ps.pdf Simson Provincial Park Master Plan. page 16, 32]
From 1951 until 1981, South Thormanby Island was subject to selective logging. Approximately 75% of the trees harvested were Coastal Douglas-fir and 25% were Western red cedar and balsam poplar. Most of the old trees that remain today were not harvested as they were not suitable for merchantable timber. Today, a second-growth forest has established throughout the island.[http://www.llbc.leg.bc.ca/public/pubdocs/bcdocs/366048/simson_ps.pdf Simson Provincial Park Master Plan. page 27]
Beavers were introduced to the island in 1984 and 1985. They dammed part of the meadow at the former Simson Farm, creating the lake that currently exists there.[http://www.llbc.leg.bc.ca/public/pubdocs/bcdocs/366048/simson_ps.pdf Simson Provincial Park Master Plan. page 28]