- Stave Lake
Infobox lake
lake_name = Stave Lake
image_lake =
caption_lake =
image_bathymetry =
caption_bathymetry =
location =Mission, British Columbia
coords = coord|49|22|N|122|18|W|region:CA-BC_type:waterbody|display=inline,title [BCGNIS|6839|Stave Lake]
type =reservoir , natural lake
inflow =
outflow =
catchment =
basin_countries = Canada
length =
width =
area = 55 km²
depth =
max-depth =
volume =
residence_time =
shore =
elevation =
islands =
cities =Stave Lake is a hydroelectric
reservoir in theStave River system, located on the northern edge of the District of Mission, about 65 km east ofVancouver, British Columbia . The main arm of thelake is just over 20 km long, and there is a southwest arm ending atStave Falls Dam about 9.5 km long. The original lake occupied about a third of the space of the main arm. The combined area of the lake is nominally about 55 square kilometres.The Stave River, the traditional territory of the
Skayuks , a vanishedHalqemeylem-speaking Coast Salish people related to today's , was a productive salmon river. Huge red cedar trees grew in the valley and these drew sawmilling and cedar shingle interests, notablyStave Lake Cedar Ltd. , whose mill was a mile above the damsite. The lower portion of the Stave is calledHayward Lake , formed byRuskin Dam and formerly a canyon similar to Capilano andLynn Canyon s, and at its head in the grounds of the one-time community of worker's housing, there is a recreation area there and the beginning of a lakeside trail using the right-of-way of a railway line. TheStave Falls Power Company , later a subsidiary of the BCER, dammed the river in the 1920-22 period. Two large cement dams, the powerhouse, bunkhouses, a community hall, a large workers' community and railway, known as theStave Falls Branch , were part of these projects. As a result the Upper Stave was raised and flooded the forests, as was also the case later with Hayward Lake, which was formed by the completion of Ruskin Dam in 1930. The cedar stood in the river for years, though during the 1980s and 1990s the timber been reclaimed by work crews from a prison camp nearSayres Lake (Cedar Lake] , adjacent to the opening from the main arm, by prolonged lowerings of the reservoir level to allow for timber extraction.After the dam was built logging lines used the right of way and logged further north into the Stave Valley. The film "We're no Angels" was partly filmed at the Stave damcomplex.
References
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