Wallace Island Marine Provincial Park

Wallace Island Marine Provincial Park is a provincial park in the Gulf Islands of British Columbia, Canada. The park includes almost all 72 hectares (180 acres) of Wallace Island. Land on the northern side of Princess Cove extending north towards Chivers is private. This long, thin island lies in Trincomali Channel south-west of Galiano Island, and about 2 km (1.2 mi) northeast of Saltspring Island. There are a few hiking trails, and camping is permitted in designated areas.

Wallace Island Marine Provincial Park
Map showing the location of Wallace Island Marine Provincial Park
Map showing the location of Wallace Island Marine Provincial Park
Location on Vancouver Island
Map showing the location of Wallace Island Marine Provincial Park
Map showing the location of Wallace Island Marine Provincial Park
Location in British Columbia
Map showing the location of Wallace Island Marine Provincial Park
Map showing the location of Wallace Island Marine Provincial Park
LocationWallace Island, British Columbia, Canada
Nearest townChemainus
Coordinates48°56′34″N 123°33′03″W / 48.9428°N 123.5509°W / 48.9428; -123.5509[2]
Area72 ha (180 acres)
Established1990
Governing bodyBC Parks
WebsiteWallace Island Marine Provincial Park

Conover Cove, on the western side, and Princess Cove, slightly north of Conover on the western side, are the two anchorages used by pleasure boaters. Conover Cove has a small dock which can accommodate shallow-draft vessels. The island is accessible by private boat. There is no public ferry service.

Panther Point, at the south end, has dangerous rocky reefs which extend well past the island. Following the local tradition of naming hazardous reefs after the ships that found them, Panther Point is named after the Panther, a merchant coal-carrier, which ran aground there in 1874, carrying a full load of coal from Nanaimo. Divers still visit what remains of the ship.

Between 1947 and the mid-1960s the island was developed as a vacation resort. One cabin remains standing and intact, and the remains of a few other guest cabins are still present. David Conover wrote a book, Once Upon an Island, which describes this period of the Island's history. Conover continued the tale in One Man's Island and Sitting on a Salt Spring.

The increasing popularity of the island has attracted tourists and animals alike. Within the last decade there has been a bear and a cougar scare.[citation needed]

The island was named for Captain Wallace Houston of HMS Trincomalee who served in the area in 1853.[3]: 290 

See also

  • Once Upon an Island by David Conover. Publisher: San Juan Publishing (November 2003)

References


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