Tuesday, May 23, 2023

Rosa Nutkana

"A rose by any other name would smell as sweet," says Juliet when she hears that Romeo is a dreaded Montague. But many roses do not smell sweet at all. In their hybridization, they've lost something.

The Nootka Rose is both beautiful to behold and heavenly to smell. Its scent is as strong as any essential oil, and I cannot pass by without stopping to smell the roses. 


This ancient wild rose is native to the Pacific Coast from Northern California to Alaska. 

Rosa Nutkana was named after Nootka Sound by one of the early explorers to the coast who first saw it there. I think, possibly by the biologist aboard Captain Cook's ship, HMS Resolution. Cook was astronomer and scientist on this his third voyage but William Anderson served as biologist and naturalist. They traveled with a sister ship, HMS Discovery, piloted by Captain Clerke, and the two, who were searching for a Northwest Passage to the North Atlantic, were in a naming/claiming frenzy.

They arrived in Yuquot by accident after sailing north from California and missing The Strait of Juan de Fuca. Then ended up staying and trading for sea otter pelts from March 29 until April 26 in 1778. Since this rose blooms in early spring, it's possible they were in bloom during the month the crew stayed.

I'd like to know what the Nuu-chah-nulth People call this rose. It's said the rose is used medicinally and the hips are bitter but edible. If anyone knows its true name or how it's used, please leave a comment. 

Of course, if you don't live on the Northwest Pacific Coast, you likely know this wild and beautiful rose by another name. I've seen it called Prairie Rose. Are there wild roses where you live? What do you call them? 



 


 


Sunday, May 14, 2023

Standing on the Curve of Time Once More

 


Since it's Mother's Day here in Canada, I'd like to celebrate a daring Adventure Mom. I first discovered Capi Blanchet's British Columbia adventure classic in a thrift store way back in 2002. Her literary tales captured me then, just as they do today. 

The title derives from Maeterlinck's theory that Time is a fourth dimension, relative to each of us, and can be plotted on a curve. This makes sense to me. Time is anything but linear. We weave in circles and spirals through other dimensions.

"Standing in the Present, on the highest point of the curve, you can look back and see the Past, or forward and see the Future, all in the same instant" (1). 

This small, yet significant, book is a compilation of stories remembered by Capi—a nickname she took from her boat, Caprice—that chronicle her adventures exploring the British Columbia coast in the 1920s-1930s with her five children. I say loosely because I read now that her stories were highly fictionalized. Still, what she wrote is travel memoir and something now lauded as Creative Nonfiction. 

According to Cathy Converse, author of Following the Curve of time: the Untold Story of Capi Blanchet, Capi's depressed husband sailed off alone to Saltspring Island in September 1926 and never returned. The empty Caprice was discovered with his clothing onboard but his body was never recovered. Blanchet was in her mid-thirties. To earn money to support her five children, Capi rented their seaside Little House near Sydney for four months each summer and took them boating. The 25' Caprice was so small, they were only allowed to bring one bathing suit, one change of clothing, and one set of pajamas each. For the most part, they lived off land and sea, fishing and gathering, and were fortunate to meet generous homesteaders who sometimes offered them all the fruit they could pick and carry. 


Capi was not only a risk-taker and independent woman, her prose is beautiful crafted and interwoven with natural history, archaeology, and dialogue. AND she can fix a boat engine—something I'm most impressed with. Honestly, I'd love to pilot a boat but the thought of a breakdown out around the islands terrifies me. There were times too, that Blanchet was forced to row the dinghy for hours with Caprice in tow. She writes of lighthouses (most were built then), adverse weather and seas, and navigating tide rips like Skookumchuk and Seymour Narrows. They traversed rugged inlets with steep mountain walls and channels too deep to set an anchor, sighted bear and cougar, and survived all the strait threw at them. 

Like her contemporary, Emily Carr, Blanchet discovered abandoned Kwakwaka'wak and Coast Salish villages, big houses, white shell middens, post carvings, hanging tree graves, artifacts, even bones. Out of respect, she doesn't reveal the locations of these places. 

The book began as a series of articles Blanchet sold to yachting magazines, Blackwood's Magazine in Edinburgh, and the Atlantic Monthly. Perhaps that's how they became fictionalized. In the 1950s, she compiled The Curve of Time which was published by Blackwood & Sons in 1961. It's sad that only six months later, Capi died at her typewriter while working on a second memoir of their adventures at the Little House. She was just seventy years old, but it seems to me, most of those seventy years were packed with adventure and daring. 

My 30th Anniversary Special Edition was published and introduced by Gray Campbell in 1968: White Cap Books, North Vancouver, B.C. 

For more information, here's a Tyee Review of Converse's book, Following the Curve of time: the Untold Story of Capi Blanchet.


Where the Winds Blow

Beginnings are as elusive as wispy summer clouds—impalpable, yet poignant.  I can't remember the exact moment when I decided to apply to...