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Churn
Creek Provincial Park
History
The fur trade
began to influence the traditional lifestyle of local aboriginal
peoples in the early 1860s. At this time, the fur trade had already
declined due to waning populations of furbearers. The discovery
of gold in the Cariboo further increased the non-native presence
in the Churn Creek area. The first nonnative residents of the Churn
Creek area were pack train operators bringing supplies to the gold
fields at Barkerville and Quesnel Forks. They were followed in the
1880s by an influx of Chinese miners, who created a dam at Koster
Lake, and ran ditches to placer mines on the Fraser River. Around
the same time, sheep and cattle ranchers began to run their herds
in the area. What we know today as the Empire Valley Ranch began
as many small ranches and homesteads. By 1910, several ranching
families built the Empire Valley's first school near Brown Lake.
At this time, a bridge was constructed over the Fraser River, replacing
the ferry and cable car that had operated since the 1860s. The bridge
still features the original towers and cables, but it is now rebuilt
to provincial standards.
By the 1940s,
gold was discovered on Blackdome Mountain by Lawrence Frenier. However,
ranching remained the economic mainstay, with some logging as well,
until Churn Creek was designated a protected area in 1995.
Culture
The Churn Creek
Protected Area has a long history of First Nations use extending
back nearly 7,000 years. Archaeological evidence includes cultural
depressions from pithouse (kekuli) villages, and surface remnants
of stone tools. The principal First Nations groups occupying the
Churn Creek area were the Ts'ilhqot'in (Chilcotin) and Secwepemc
(Shuswap), each further divided into tribal divisions and bands.
Research suggests
that a distinct culture based on hunting and gathering had developed
on the Interior Plateau as early as 7,000 years ago, with river
fishing developing sometime later. It is suggested that First Nations
peoples lived in essentially permanent pit house villages during
the winter months, and were largely nomadic during the remainder
of the year to procure food and other resources. Some divisions
of the Chilcotin and Shuswap peoples were important trading partners,
and often shared winter villages and fishing sites.
As days lengthened
in the spring, people ventured from these permanent villages and
began gathering fresh roots and vegetation. Summer homes were structures
made with lodge poles and a bark or mat covering; hides were considered
too valuable to use for this purpose. Midsummer was trout fishing
time, followed by berry picking and salmon fishing. Fishing - with
dipnets made of roots, gaffs, and fish traps - was carried out at
Perkins Rock and at the confluence of Churn Creek and the Fraser
River. Both salmon and sturgeon were plentiful. In the late autumn,
people hunted for deer, elk and bighorn sheep. (During the early
1900s, moose moved south and displaced elk from the Cariboo-Chilcotin.)
Hunters used bows of wood and sinew, and arrows with points chipped
from obsidian. Deer hunters used such techniques as calling and
setting up corrals. Processing food so people could survive the
winter was a vital and continuing task during the summer and fall
seasons.
At the low elevations
of the bunchgrass grasslands, spring arrives early. First Nations
people gathered and ate such plants as mariposa lily, nodding onion,
and prickly pear cactus. Big sagebrush bark could be woven into
cloth, while the leaves were used in a medicinal tea, and were burned
for their purifying smoke. At higher elevations, arrow-leafed balsamroot,
Saskatoon berries, and chokecherries provided nutriment. People
would deliberately burn tracts of grassland to encourage the regrowth
of herbs, and prevent the encroachment of Douglas-fir trees onto
the grasslands.
It is an offence
under the Heritage Conservation Act to damage or remove artifacts
from any cultural heritage site.
Conservation
The primary
role of the Churn Creek Protected Area is to conserve and restore
nationally significant grassland ecosystems and wildlife populations.
These grasslands represent the northern extent of large bunchgrass
grassland ecosystems with their centre of distribution in central
Washington. What makes Churn Creek so ecologically significant is
its mosaic of grasslands, shrub-steppe, wetlands, kettle lakes,
and dry open forests. Such diversity of habitats supports tremendous
diversity of living creatures. This diversity is distinctive in
the province's protected areas system, making Churn Creek the most
significant grassland protected area west of the Rockies.
The Churn Creek
grasslands are a product of the "rain shadow" created
by British Columbia's coastal mountains, and are therefore characterized
by dry, hot summers, and cold, low-snowfall winters. These grasslands
are located in deeply incised, heat-trapping valleys. In this area,
annual rainfall and snowfall increases with elevation, with annual
precipitation ranging from 300 to 400 mm. By early July, drought
conditions typically prevail. On most low- to mid-elevation sites,
summer droughts are too severe for trees to become established;
forests are restricted to moister sites such as steep, cool aspects,
and shady ravines. Drought tolerant perennial bunchgrasses, scattered
shrubs, and microbiotic soil crusts dominate the landscape. The ecology of grassland plants and the lichen crust
is extremely interesting. Many grassland plants are highly sensitive
to disturbance - please do not remove them or destroy their habitat.
Ground lichens can take over ten years to recover from damage caused
by one vehicle. This damage is intensified by each passing vehicle,
allowing erosion to set in.
Driving over
the grasslands is an offence punishable by law. Please obey any
posted signs showing a vehicle in a circle with a line drawn through
it; this sign means No Motorized Vehicles Beyond This Point.
Wildlife
Although grasslands
occupy less than 2% of the province's land area, they support a
third of the province's threatened and endangered species. The grasslands
of the Cariboo-Chilcotin contain a tremendous diversity of wildlife
species. The Churn Creek Protected Area captures much of this diversity,
stretching 25 km along the Fraser River and incorporating arid grasslands,
cool, moist deep ravines and riparian areas, grassland/forest edges,
dry Douglas-fir forests, and moist high elevation pine and spruce
forests. Some of the threatened wildlife found in the Churn Creek
area includes Lewis woodpecker, Brewer's
sparrow, sage thrasher, peregrine falcon, Swainson's hawk, bobolink,
flammulated owl, pallid bat, fringed myotis, rubber boa, and the
gopher snake. The Protected Area also includes critical winter habitat
for approximately 2500 mule deer, year-round habitat for 300-500
California Bighorn sheep, and
populations of black bear, cougar, bobcat, lynx, and small mammals.
Significant concentrations of bird, bat, amphibian, and reptile
species can also be found in the Churn Creek grasslands; a number
of these species are at their northern breeding limits.
In addition
to its diversity of terrestrial habitats ranging from grassland
to open forest, Churn Creek incorporates a number of kettle lakes,
streams, and large creeks. Since the small lakes, marshes, and creeks
either remain ice-free or thaw early in the spring, they also provide
important staging and stopover areas for migratory waterfowl, and
year-round habitat for muskrats, reptiles and amphibians.
Visitors should
be aware that the Protected Area includes black bear habitat, and
that black bears are an important component of the Churn Creek Protected
Area. Never feed or approach bears or other wildlife.
Return to Churn
Creek Provincial Park
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