- Spruce Lake Protected Area
and has been the subject of an ongoing preservationist controversy since the 1930s. Former park plans were put forward as Charlie Cunningham Wilderness and the Spruce Lake-Eldorado Mountain Wilderness.
Protected area status
The area was designated as a protected area by the BC provincial government in 2001, and then established as a Provincial Park by then Minister of Water, Land and Air Protection Minister Joyce Murray in 2004, with park boundaries including 70% of the protected area and limited resource extraction allowed in the remaining area on the protected area's periphery. The protected area designation resulted from the Lillooet Land and Resource Management Plan (LRMP), in which local communities, environmental, recreation and resource interests were attempted to be addressed. Even though it is not in the
Chilcotin District proper, the area has been called the "South Chilcotins" since about 1980 when a group of conservationists started to promote the area for protection as a park. The South Chilcotin name is derived from its geographic position in theChilcotin Ranges , into theBridge River Country where the park is located. Bert Brink, one of BC's most reknowned naturalist, who died in 2007, was an advocate for the conservation of this area for over sixty years and lived to see it become a park.Location
The protected area is located 200 km north of
Vancouver on the inland lea of thePacific Ranges of theCoast Mountains , on the north flank of the Bridge River Country and the Chilcotin Country to the north. It adjoinsBig Creek Provincial Park andTs'il?os Provincial Park , which border it on the north and northwest, respectively. Part of the larger subcomplex of thePacific Ranges known as theChilcotin Ranges , the area was partially protected in the 1990s after 60 years of debate and controversy, although its status as a provincial park was downgraded to protected area in 2007.This region contains only a portion of the southern
Chilcotin Ranges and partly is in the Bridge River Country, historically connected to theLillooet Country which lies to its south and east and not part of theChilcotin District . It remains the object of a protracted quarrel between preservationist and resource development which first began in the 1930s when prospectors and guide-outfitters dedicated to its natural beauty proposed it be preserved. One manifestation of these proposals bore the name of one of the driving forces of the original movement to preserve the area, Charlie Cunningham, whose career as a wildlife film-maker began in this area. The Charlie Cunningham Wilderness proposal was revised in the 1970s as the Spruce Lake-Eldorado park proposal, but as land-use plans impinged on the proposed park area this name was abandoned.The original proposals to protect it began in the 1930s during the heyday of the Bridge River goldfield towns just to the south. It has been proposed under a number of names, including the Charlie Cunningham Wilderness and the Spruce Lake-Eldorado Park Proposal, and also as the Spruce Lake Management Planning Unit.
The area's unique and distinct landscape and ecology, so different even from the rest of the
Chilcotin Ranges or the rest of the Bridge River Country, is what made it stand out for protection amid a region already wild and extremely beautiful (especially back in the 1930s, long before logging, hydroelectric development transformed the valley to the south.. The neighbouring Dickson, Shulaps andBendor Range s are all unprotected and have been or are being heavily logged, except for special preserves in alpine areas of the Shulaps and in its neighbour to the east, theCamelsfoot Range .Many on the environmentalist side hope that the creation of Ts'ilos and
Big Creek Provincial Park s will help shore up the protection of the South Chilcotin Provincial Park which remains vulnerable to government review. Hunting guide Ted (Chilco) Choate of Gaspard Lake, on the Chilcotin Plateau just northeast of the South Chilcotins Park has joined in the call to combine all these three parks, plus theChurn Creek Protected Area to their northeast, plus some of the surrounding country and the deep, much higher heart of thePacific Ranges into aNational Park . Industry and government remain publicly committed to shared use and sustainable planning.First Nations History
Historically this region was the hunting territory of
Chief Hunter Jack of the Lakes Lillooet, whose big-game hunting business shared the region with hunters of theTsilhqot'in people. The shared use of the area north of theBridge River and Gun Creek was part of the settlement of an early 19th Century peace which had ended a long and bloody war between Hunter Jack's people and theTsilhqot'in .Trails from the Bridge River Country led over the region to Taseko Lake and
Chilko Lake in the Chilcotin Country, and also east across theCamelsfoot Range to theFraser River near Big Bar.External links
* [http://www.env.gov.bc.ca/bcparks/explore/parkpgs/south_chil.html BC Parks - Spruce Lake Protected Area]
* [http://bivouac.com/ArxPg.asp?ArxId=2091 Chilcotin Ranges entry in the Canadian Mountain Encyclopedia]
* [http://www.telemark.net/%7Erandallg/photos/20061010_Chilko_Lake/images/RIMG0172.jpgAerial view of Spruce Lake and (R) Eldorado Mountain] from [http://www.telemark.net/%7Erandallg/photos/20061010_Chilko_Lake/ Randall & Kat's Flying Photos]
* [http://www.telemark.net/%7Erandallg/photos/20061010_Chilko_Lake/images/RIMG0176.jpgAerial view of Spruce Lake] from [http://www.telemark.net/%7Erandallg/photos/20061010_Chilko_Lake/ Randall & Kat's Flying Photos []
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