How David Herreshoff found Kaslo and told me I had to promise to move there when he retired PDF Print E-mail
Written by Jessie Kennedy Herreshoff   
Wednesday, 27 August 2008 17:51

Kaslo.org is intended to be a place where we can share and swap info and stories with one another. Kaslovian Jessie Kennedy Herreshoff has come up with a great suggestion - here's how she put it in a recent email:

"Like many of us, David and I over the past 23 years have regularly been asked at parties or neighborhood get-togethers,'how did you two find Kaslo?'  or "how did a former American and Scot with strong individual opinions manage to reach consensus to abandon their previous lives and move to a village one of them had never heard of and couldn't even find on a map?' It occurs to me that virtually every person who has moved here from somewhere else is asked some version of the same question. So my suggestion is that there could be an entertaining and informative segment on this website for the stories of those who made the carefully considered (or perhaps spur of the moment) decision to abandon previous careers and lifestyles to come to Shangri La. I'm not the Webmaster of the Kaslo website but how about calling it 'How We All Found Kaslo'?"

Sounds like a great idea to us. Who's next?!

 

Move to Kaslo?

This of course was an impossible request as I had never seen Kaslo.  He had found the village while visiting old friends in the Balfour area.  He was scouting around for our future retirement home and decided to drive further up the lake. But I had never been in British Columbia and could not have found Kaslo on a map if my life depended on it.  I knew vaguely that it was somewhere in Western Canada, but like most Brits I had no idea how huge Canada was.   However I had spent too many years living and working in the greater Detroit area of the U.S. and would probably have moved to Siberia in hopes of a better lifestyle so I finally said (but in many more words) “O.K.”

One other irrational reason why I said yes was that as a young child during the Second World War the highlight of each Christmas (assuming the ship had not been sunk by German submarines) was the arrival of a huge box of British Columbia apples from distant cousins of my mother.  I had carried that wonderful taste with me all through my adult life, partly because B.C. apples are special, but also partly because we World War II children were close to starvation by the time the war finally ended and that annual box of B.C. apples literally helped my family to stay in reasonably good health in spite of the food shortages, particularly in the last two years or so of that terrible conflict.

Long time, and much-missed Kaslo resident Truus Meijer Drees and I used to sit in her comfortable kitchen eating chocolate and reminiscing about being children during the Second World War.  She of course had a much tougher time than I, as Holland was occupied by the German army during that war.  She said they had to eat the special tulip bulbs sometimes and I tried to keep my end of the story up by elaborating on the delights of chewing red sealing wax and pretending it was chewing gum.  (we did not know until much later that the red dye in sealing wax was toxic).  She sometimes discussed this period in history with Kaslo resident Bruce Tate.  Bruce had been a twenty year old soldier in the Canadian regiment that liberated Truus’s home town, with their regimental colours proudly held aloft, while Truus and her parents stood in the street waving Canadian flags and cheering their liberators. Her father was a member of the brave Dutch Resistance and her mother (a physician) hid wounded freedom fighters and Allied airmen in their attic.

What I am trying to say in too many words is that from the first day I strolled along Front Street with David I have felt completely at home in Kaslo, and have known and enjoyed the friendship of many fine (and frequently delightfully eccentric) people over the years.  I have lived in quite a few different parts of the world during my lifetime: (the Scottish shipbuilding town of Port-Glasgow on the River Clyde, “the automobile capital of the world,” Detroit;  Istanbul, Turkey; and two years in Romania during the dictatorship of the madman Ceausescu for example), but Kaslo and those who live here won my heart right from the start.

...

 

When I first saw the acreage David had bought at Fletcher Creek, right next to the waterfall, my first reaction was that this pile of rock and cliff did not even have enough level ground to build a cabin on, let alone a permanent home.  And I was right.  So David (the eternal optimist in our marriage) said we would just have to build it on the Old Road and hope for the best.  That was over twenty five years ago and the house is still sitting solidly anchored where it should be.  Sometime during the first week I spent in Kaslo I was standing in the grocery store and heard someone with an unmistakable Glasgow accent making a wisecrack with another customer.  The accent belonged to Dick Smith, the Kaslo Boatbuilder Extraordinaire.  It turned out that Dick had served his shipbuilding apprenticeship in the same Clyde shipyard in which my father had spent his working life, and my grandfather and great grandfather before him.












 
Kaslo Fire Interface Project PDF Print E-mail
Written by John Addison   
Wednesday, 27 August 2008 03:57

Kaslo Fire Interface Project

The following article is the 1st of many installments to assist the community with understanding the concept of Fire Interfacing and the Kaslo Project. Your understanding and support of this project can make your home and Village a safer place to live, especially in times of High to Extreme Fire Hazards.

Through funding initiatives from the Federal and Provincial Government, specifically the Community Development Trust – Job Opportunities Program and the Union of BC Municipalities, Kaslo has been approved for funding to conduct fire interfacing within and surrounding the Village of Kaslo Municipal Boundary.

So what is Fire Interfacing? Fire Interface is the place where the “forest meets the community” and is graphically depicted in the figure below. Other configurations of the Fire Interface can be described as intermixed. Intermixed areas include smaller, more isolated developments that are embedded within the forest.

In each of these cases, fire has the ability to spread from the forest into the community or from the community out into the forest. Although these two scenarios are quite different, they are of equal importance when considering interface fire risk. The probability of a fire moving out of a community and into the forest is equal or greater to the probability of fire moving from the forest into a community.

Fire Interface

 Graphical example showing variation in the definition of interface.

Historically, there has been limited understanding of wildland urban interface fire risks within many communities of British Columbia. However, the lessons learned from the 2003 fire season have significantly increased local fire service awareness and local, regional, and provincial organizations have upgraded fire suppression understanding and capability. Despite this, there is still limited understanding among key community stakeholders and decision makers. Education and communication programs must target the broad spectrum of stakeholder groups within the community. The target audience should include, but is not limited to, the following groups:

• Homeowners within areas that could be impacted by interface fire;

• Local businesses;

• Municipal councils and staff;

• Regional District of Central Kootenay Directors;

• Local utilities; and

• Media.

The objective of Kaslo’s Fire Interfacing Project will be to reduce the fuel loads within high risk areas of non-private property within and surrounding the Village boundary. The following photo illustrates the project vicinity.

VOK

Kaslo Municipal Boundary

The Kaslo Fire Interface Project was initiated by a community group of concerned citizens and supported by the Village of Kaslo and RDCK. It is our sincere hope that community members will actively participate in this Fire Interfacing Project through enthusiastically becoming involved in learning about the Fire Smart & Interface Programs.

To get your own copy of the Fire Smart Manual, click on the following link:

http://www.pep.bc.ca/hazard_preparedness/FireSmart-BC4.pdf

 

Last Updated ( Wednesday, 27 August 2008 05:43 )
 
View from Mt. Loki looking towards Kaslo PDF Print E-mail
Written by Patrick Mallet   
Monday, 25 August 2008 16:10

 

Ever wonder what the view's like from Mount Loki (the most prominent Purcell peak seen across the lake from Kaslo)?

Well, here it is, taken by a group that included Victoria McAllister, Chris & Joanne Temple, Michael Proctor and his Nelson-based friend, Kathleen, and photographer Pat Mallet, on August 24th.

Do we live in a spectacular part of the world, or what?!

Last Updated ( Tuesday, 26 August 2008 17:38 )
 
The End of The Fairy Tale PDF Print E-mail
Written by Randy Morse   
Friday, 22 August 2008 07:27

Kaslo.org is intended to be a community news and information source. That doesn't necessarily mean that all the news and information presented here must be about the community - witness this thought-provoking article about Russia's recent actions in Georgia and the West's ineffectual response by retired U.S. army officer Ralph Peters, which appeared originally in the online journal RealClearPolitics.com, submitted by Kaslovian John Eckland. We're working to launch a fresh new set of categories here at kaslo.org soon, and Politics - along with a Speaker's Corner - will be one of them. Keep those interesting articles - and soon, your opinions regarding their content - coming.

,  

August 22, 2008


By Ralph Peters


A specter is haunting Europe-the specter of Putinism. Confronted by a masterful Russian leader without living peer in brilliance or ruthlessness, the continent sorely lacks leadership and a sense of common purpose. In their muddled reactions to the Kremlin's invasion of Georgia, European states revealed a gap in perceptions that threatens to deepen: Those who suffered under the Soviet yoke sense the return of an existential threat, while those who thrived under the Pax Americana are merely annoyed at being disturbed. As Russian troops and their mercenary auxiliaries savaged a free, democratic country yearning Westward, the world got another lesson in how ineffectual Europe is in a crisis without American leadership.

The United States performed no better. Scorned for his aggressive behavior in the past, President Bush spent the first crucial days of the Georgia crisis as a bewildered observer reluctant to recognize the gravity of the problem. Putin went to war and the American president went to a basketball game--reinforcing the Kremlin's conviction that it could do as it pleased and get away with it. (Bush's gravest flaw is that he's a dreadful judge of character, stubbornly trusting undeserving men, from Iraqi schemer Ahmed Chalabi, through the incompetent Alberto Gonzales, to Vladimir Putin, who played Bush for a fool.)

The American president is furious now, but it's too late. High noon came and went, and the much-derided cowboy-president wasn't there when he was needed. Instead, French president Nicolas Sarkozy, well-intentioned and inadequate, took time off from the Feydeau farce of his personal life and rushed to Moscow to "demand" a cease-fire in Georgia.

The Putin regime was perfectly willing to let Monsieur le President return to Paris with a signed piece of paper. The Russians have drawn the lesson from Western efforts to negotiate with Iran and other rogue states that Europe can be narcotized with empty agreements and nebulous promises and that Europe has become a continent of bureaucrats who much prefer paperwork to reality. And there are no penalties when the agreements prove
worthless. The Russian government was reasonably polite, but did not take Sarkozy seriously. Even as he presumed to speak for the European Union, he had no practical leverage with the Kremlin.

One can only admire the unrivaled acuity with which Putin, the old KGB agent, sized up the other players he knew would come to the strategic gaming table. He took his cue to begin planning his punitive expedition into Georgia last winter, when a core group of European states, led by Germany, refused to inaugurate concrete measures (such as MAPs, or Military Action Plans) to set Ukraine and Georgia on course to become NATO members. Moscow read NATO's Sendung as an abandonment, especially of Georgia. Thereafter, Russia's leader surveyed the international characters who had chips on the table: President Bush had convinced himself that Putin was his friend and could be blindsided; Europe's leaders could be depended upon to quibble among themselves while seeking to avoid incurring any serious costs; and the mercurial President Mikheil Saakashvili of Georgia could be goaded into a conflict at the time of Russia's choosing.

Putin chose that hour well. Beginning in late July, artillery barrages, sniping incidents and raids staged from South Ossetia increased in intensity as Russia's local clients prodded Georgia to respond. Politically and practically, Saakashvili had to react: no national leader can permit deadly, daily attacks upon his electorate to go unanswered. As Russian troops finished massing on Georgia's northern border, Putin notched the violence up again. Saakashvili took the bait on schedule.

Western intelligence analysts had been expecting a violent confrontation for many months, yet none believed it would come just when it did, assuming that Putin wouldn't act during the Olympics. But Putin saw opportunity where others saw impossibility-a hallmark of genius. He exploited the simultaneous opening of the Olympics and the departure of EU, NATO and national European bureaucrats for their August vacations. Key leaders would be in Beijing, far from their capitals and staffs, while the world's attention would be focused on swimmers and gymnasts. From Washington to Berlin, the best and the brightest would be standing down at their beach homes, Tuscan farmhouses or Wyoming ranches. Putin gained a decisive 100 hours.

From the start, Russian government voices all sang from the same score. Putin set the pitch, deploying lyrics he knew would resonate in the West, such as "genocide" and "response." With cold-blooded aplomb, the Russians accused the Georgians of doing precisely what the Russians were doing to the Georgians. Putin and his team understood that, in the Information Age, gaining early control of the narrative of events is essential and the Russians did it artfully. Throughout the first ten days of the crisis, the global media continued to find a moral equivalence between Russia's actions and Georgia's that was never there: untutored in the complexities of the region, lazy journalists accepted Moscow's proposition that a tiny nation with 87 decrepit tanks in its inventory had vigorously attacked a power that could deploy over 6,400 tanks.

The result? Russia won this war, energetically integrating the various elements of governmental power-military, diplomatic, intelligence, economic and informational-in the manner that Western doctrine preaches, but to a degree that Western powers have yet to achieve anywhere. While frightened Poland immediately agreed to participate in a new American anti-missile program and terrified Ukraine asked to be included, as well, the cocktail-reception anger elsewhere on the continent will dissipate rapidly. And the United States can do little in the Georgia case without determined European support. "Reason" will prevail, and Russia will suffer no meaningful penalties. Putin will, literally, get away with murder.

He'll murder again, as a consequence. We've seen this pattern played out in the United States, when, in the 1990s, the Clinton administration refused to take Islamist terrorism seriously: al Qaeda was supposed to fade away because we wanted it to fade away. But al Qaeda wasn't interested in our wishes. Likewise, Western European states that have enjoyed the richest, longest stretch of peace in their history don't want the party to end and so make excuses for Russia.

But the party always ends. Vladimir Putin just put Europe on notice that time's up and the catering bills are due. Nonetheless, Western Europe will continue its efforts to duck out on its strategic creditors: The continent's oldest democracies will have to be cornered miserably before they accept the new, brutal reality created by Russia's new czar. In the short term, Putin will continue to terrorize Georgia. In the mid-term, his diplomats will placate Europe with promises. In the long-term, he'll do whatever he damn well pleases. For all his savagery, it's impossible not to admire Putin's Kampfgeist. He may well be the giant of our age.

That said, this latest burst of Russian imperialism will end badly for Russia-eventually. Russia's patterns are deeply ingrained, and Putin is the quintessential Russian in his ambitions (if not in his tee-totaling). Russia always overreaches, and Putin will, too. But the longer he is left unchecked, the grimmer and costlier the ultimate confrontation is going to be.

It's become a cliche to cite Putin's KGB past when explaining him. Yet, Russia's new strongman isn't an ideologue; he's an ethnic nationalist. There's no taint of dialectical materialism in the cold-eyed man from St. Petersburg; on the contrary, he's far more a creature from a Dostoevsky novel than a "new Soviet man" produced by Lenin. Even Putin's heritage as a secret policeman reaches farther back than the recent era of the KGB-or Cheka, or NKVD, or MGB. Putin harks back beyond the czarist Okhrana to the proto-Gestapo Oprichniki of Ivan the Terrible, whose twin concerns were internal order and the exclusion of all things foreign, and whose elementary traits were paranoia and cruelty.

The rise of Vladimir Putin is bad news for Russia's immediate neighbors (who realize it), for Western Europe (which struggles to deny it), and for the United States (which cannot act effectively against Moscow without European solidarity). Putin understands the principle of "divide and conquer." The founding-generation states of NATO appear to have forgotten the counter-principle of "unite and win."

What did Putin seek when he sent his revitalized military and its vicious auxiliaries across the Great Caucasus? Three things:

1. To punish Georgia for its Westward yearnings and to destroy its president. Putin meant to make it clear that Moscow's former possessions will not be allowed to create freewheeling, Western-allied democracies on Russia's borders. Additionally, Putin resembles Bush in one odd respect: Both men personalize diplomacy, but where Bush has a Texan confidence that he can make a friend of anyone, Putin assesses every interlocutor as a potential enemy. Now Putin is venting his personal hatred of Georgia's president, who had the audacity to talk back to the new czar.

2. To send a message to the strayed states of the old Russian (not Soviet) empire that Moscow still intends to rule all that the czars once ruled. Hungary, the Czech Republic and their Central European brethren aren't included in Putin's present appetite, but the entire Caucasus, Central Asia, the Baltic triplets, Ukraine and eastern Poland are on the Kremlin's strategic menu.

3. To gain hegemony over the last non-Russian-controlled pipelines delivering gas and oil from the Caspian Basin and Central Asia to the West. Like many historically minded Russians, Putin recalls how desperate the World War II-era Germans were to reach Baku and its oil fields. The lesson he's drawn is that, instead of merely depriving Panzers and Stukas of gasoline, reborn Russia can deny fuel to all of Europe in a crisis. Given that Kremlin-backed Russian energy interests have been able to hire a former German chancellor for a handful of Euros, it's difficult to envision Europe uniting to diversify its energy sources: Europe is strolling open-eyed into energy slavery.

The essential point here is that Russia has a strategic vision, while the West does not. Putin acts, we react. Russia plans, we improvise. Our behavior is both ineffective and woefully inefficient. Worsening the situation, the United States is weary and, increasingly, inward-focused. Meanwhile, Europe enjoys complaining about an over-engaged America, but it may find that it likes a disengaged America a great deal less. There is nothing that passes for a convincing strategic vision in either Washington or Brussels. We are simultaneously outclassed by our self-appointed opponent and determined to put off any unpleasant reckoning: The two richest and most-powerful continents in history cannot rally together against a middling state with an aging, dying population that depends on a single source for its national income.

The determination, especially in Western Europe, to minimize the importance of the rape of Georgia-Putin's actions amount to nothing less-is gratingly reminiscent of the cries of "Why Die for Danzig?" that echoed in Britain and France in the late 1930s. And, while politicians and pundits will do their best to minimize the perception of a military threat from the new Russia, it bears remembering that, in 1930, the German Reichswehr had 100,000 men and equipment hardly fit for a playground, yet, a mere ten years later, the Wehrmacht had millions of men under arms, the best weaponry in the world, and most of Europe under its boot-heels. While it may be unhelpful to be an alarmist, it's even less useful to be willfully naïve.

Putin's team won the Georgia match and every point in play. In the absence of meaningful European unity and Euro-American solidarity, Moscow will win the next round, too.

Ralph Peters is a retired Army officer, a strategist and columnist, and the author of the new book, Wars Of Blood And Faith, The Conflicts That Will Shape the Twenty-First Century.”
Page Printed from: http://www.realclearpolitics.com/articles/2008/08/the_end_of_the_fairy_tale.html at August 22, 2008 - 07:37:43 AM PDT

 
A Spirit Square in Kaslo? PDF Print E-mail
Written by John Addison   
Thursday, 21 August 2008 16:55

A Community Initiative that needs your input and support!

Spirit Square

Over the past year, Kaslo has had an application for funding submitted to the B.C. Spirit Square Program and although the Kaslo Spirit Square (ad-hoc) Committee application has no response from this B.C. Government Initiative, other new Kaslo Initiatives may provide some renewed interest and prospects.

The following excerpt from the B.C. Spirit Squares website explains the concept:

“At the heart of every great community lies a site – a park, plaza, town square or open space - where citizens can gather for special occasions. These spaces help give towns and cities their identity and are recognized as “places to go” for community celebrations and commemorations. The B.C. Spirit Square Program has been launched to support the creation or improvement of such places in communities throughout B.C.

B.C. Spirit Squares is part of BC150; an initiative that is planning activities and events as part of British Columbia’s 150th anniversary as a Crown Colony. BC150 celebrates the adventures, struggles, people, events and achievements that have shaped our provincial identity.

The B.C. Spirit Squares program provides $20 million for capital projects to create or improve outdoor public meeting and celebration spaces such as traditional town squares or community commons; public gathering places that reflect each community’s unique character, heritage and cultural diversity.

B.C. Spirit Squares funding is based on a 50/50 (provincial/local government) cost-sharing basis with a maximum provincial contribution of $500,000.”

The Kaslo Spirit Square Project would like to improve the existing Saturday Market Square location (adjacent to the new Kaslo Hotel). Improvements such as an open stage/pavilion, public washrooms, fountain, gardens and pathways have been suggested. We have given some considerations to different themes and inspirations but we continue to wait for acceptance to Phase I for planning dollars.

Recently, several members of the Spirit Square Committee attended a meeting at the Village Hall, hosted by Major Holland and Village Councilors. Also attending was Val Koenig of the Kaslo Trailblazers with their new initiative for the completion of the Kaslo Waterfront Trail, which will extend from Kaslo Bay to the Kaslo River Bridge. Village Council called this meeting to see if the combined initiatives for the Spirit Square concept, the Trailblazer’s Beach Trail and the Village’s plans to make upgrades to Water Street (underground power lines, paving and making the street pedestrian friendly with sidewalks, benches & planters) could be amalgamated together under one funding initiative. 

After much discussion, due to the different kinds of programs that funding has been applied for, it is presumed that these worthwhile projects may still need to pursue funding from their own separate sources. Everyone could see the combined benefits, and members of the Spirit Square Committee are planning to tie in to these initiatives in the hopes that it may renew interest in their Spirit Square Application at the Provincial level. 

 

Like all community projects, community support, from all walks of life, goes a long way to their success.  If you can lend your support to any of these worthwhile initiatives, please let us know.

Village of Kaslo email:    This e-mail address is being protected from spambots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it

Kaslo.org email:          This e-mail address is being protected from spambots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it

 

Last Updated ( Thursday, 21 August 2008 17:23 )
 
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